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From: sommar@enea.se (Erland Sommarskog)
Newsgroups: comp.lang.ada
Subject: Re: Collective response to := messages
Message-ID: <4125@enea.se>
Date: 3 Dec 88 22:53:19 GMT
Organization: ENEA DATA AB, Sweden
Lines: 28

William Thomas Wolfe (billwolf@hubcap.clemson.edu) writes:
>     What is needed is a completion of the ADT paradigm, support for
>     which is the fundamental reason for the "limited private" feature.
>     Given that one must remember to destroy all non-predefined ADTs 
>     upon block exit, it is clear that the implications of this paradigm 
>     were not appropriately considered in the Ada 83 design. 

With other words, what you want is garbage collection. I'm quite
sure that the language designers knew about. Simula has had since
1967. Note that the language definition in no way forbids garbage
collection, but it does not require it. It says: 4.8(7) "An 
implementation may (but need not) reclaim the storage occupied by an 
object created by an allocator, once this object has become inaccessible".
In practice this means you must do all deallocating explictly if you
want to be partable.
  I think the reason why garbage collection is not required is that 
in some applications this is not very desireable from the point of 
view or performance. Typically you may not want it embedded real-time 
systems... Another thing is of course the implementation issue...

But as you point out, this is an important concept when implementing
abstract data types. I think that Ada should require garbage collection
and a pragma with which you could turn it off for critical code.
-- 
Erland Sommarskog
ENEA Data, Stockholm
sommar@enea.se
"Frequently, unexpected errors are entirely unpredictable" - Digital Equipment