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1 # HCL Syntax-Agnostic Information Model
2
3 This is the specification for the general information model (abstract types and
4 semantics) for hcl. HCL is a system for defining configuration languages for
5 applications. The HCL information model is designed to support multiple
6 concrete syntaxes for configuration, each with a mapping to the model defined
7 in this specification.
8
9 The two primary syntaxes intended for use in conjunction with this model are
10 [the HCL native syntax](./hclsyntax/spec.md) and [the JSON syntax](./json/spec.md).
11 In principle other syntaxes are possible as long as either their language model
12 is sufficiently rich to express the concepts described in this specification
13 or the language targets a well-defined subset of the specification.
14
15 ## Structural Elements
16
17 The primary structural element is the _body_, which is a container representing
18 a set of zero or more _attributes_ and a set of zero or more _blocks_.
19
20 A _configuration file_ is the top-level object, and will usually be produced
21 by reading a file from disk and parsing it as a particular syntax. A
22 configuration file has its own _body_, representing the top-level attributes
23 and blocks.
24
25 An _attribute_ is a name and value pair associated with a body. Attribute names
26 are unique within a given body. Attribute values are provided as _expressions_,
27 which are discussed in detail in a later section.
28
29 A _block_ is a nested structure that has a _type name_, zero or more string
30 _labels_ (e.g. identifiers), and a nested body.
31
32 Together the structural elements create a hierarchical data structure, with
33 attributes intended to represent the direct properties of a particular object
34 in the calling application, and blocks intended to represent child objects
35 of a particular object.
36
37 ## Body Content
38
39 To support the expression of the HCL concepts in languages whose information
40 model is a subset of HCL's, such as JSON, a _body_ is an opaque container
41 whose content can only be accessed by providing information on the expected
42 structure of the content.
43
44 The specification for each syntax must describe how its physical constructs
45 are mapped on to body content given a schema. For syntaxes that have
46 first-class syntax distinguishing attributes and bodies this can be relatively
47 straightforward, while more detailed mapping rules may be required in syntaxes
48 where the representation of attributes vs. blocks is ambiguous.
49
50 ### Schema-driven Processing
51
52 Schema-driven processing is the primary way to access body content.
53 A _body schema_ is a description of what is expected within a particular body,
54 which can then be used to extract the _body content_, which then provides
55 access to the specific attributes and blocks requested.
56
57 A _body schema_ consists of a list of _attribute schemata_ and
58 _block header schemata_:
59
60 - An _attribute schema_ provides the name of an attribute and whether its
61 presence is required.
62
63 - A _block header schema_ provides a block type name and the semantic names
64 assigned to each of the labels of that block type, if any.
65
66 Within a schema, it is an error to request the same attribute name twice or
67 to request a block type whose name is also an attribute name. While this can
68 in principle be supported in some syntaxes, in other syntaxes the attribute
69 and block namespaces are combined and so an an attribute cannot coexist with
70 a block whose type name is identical to the attribute name.
71
72 The result of applying a body schema to a body is _body content_, which
73 consists of an _attribute map_ and a _block sequence_:
74
75 - The _attribute map_ is a map data structure whose keys are attribute names
76 and whose values are _expressions_ that represent the corresponding attribute
77 values.
78
79 - The _block sequence_ is an ordered sequence of blocks, with each specifying
80 a block _type name_, the sequence of _labels_ specified for the block,
81 and the body object (not body _content_) representing the block's own body.
82
83 After obtaining _body content_, the calling application may continue processing
84 by evaluating attribute expressions and/or recursively applying further
85 schema-driven processing to the child block bodies.
86
87 **Note:** The _body schema_ is intentionally minimal, to reduce the set of
88 mapping rules that must be defined for each syntax. Higher-level utility
89 libraries may be provided to assist in the construction of a schema and
90 perform additional processing, such as automatically evaluating attribute
91 expressions and assigning their result values into a data structure, or
92 recursively applying a schema to child blocks. Such utilities are not part of
93 this core specification and will vary depending on the capabilities and idiom
94 of the implementation language.
95
96 ### _Dynamic Attributes_ Processing
97
98 The _schema-driven_ processing model is useful when the expected structure
99 of a body is known a priori by the calling application. Some blocks are
100 instead more free-form, such as a user-provided set of arbitrary key/value
101 pairs.
102
103 The alternative _dynamic attributes_ processing mode allows for this more
104 ad-hoc approach. Processing in this mode behaves as if a schema had been
105 constructed without any _block header schemata_ and with an attribute
106 schema for each distinct key provided within the physical representation
107 of the body.
108
109 The means by which _distinct keys_ are identified is dependent on the
110 physical syntax; this processing mode assumes that the syntax has a way
111 to enumerate keys provided by the author and identify expressions that
112 correspond with those keys, but does not define the means by which this is
113 done.
114
115 The result of _dynamic attributes_ processing is an _attribute map_ as
116 defined in the previous section. No _block sequence_ is produced in this
117 processing mode.
118
119 ### Partial Processing of Body Content
120
121 Under _schema-driven processing_, by default the given schema is assumed
122 to be exhaustive, such that any attribute or block not matched by schema
123 elements is considered an error. This allows feedback about unsupported
124 attributes and blocks (such as typos) to be provided.
125
126 An alternative is _partial processing_, where any additional elements within
127 the body are not considered an error.
128
129 Under partial processing, the result is both body content as described
130 above _and_ a new body that represents any body elements that remain after
131 the schema has been processed.
132
133 Specifically:
134
135 - Any attribute whose name is specified in the schema is returned in body
136 content and elided from the new body.
137
138 - Any block whose type is specified in the schema is returned in body content
139 and elided from the new body.
140
141 - Any attribute or block _not_ meeting the above conditions is placed into
142 the new body, unmodified.
143
144 The new body can then be recursively processed using any of the body
145 processing models. This facility allows different subsets of body content
146 to be processed by different parts of the calling application.
147
148 Processing a body in two steps — first partial processing of a source body,
149 then exhaustive processing of the returned body — is equivalent to single-step
150 processing with a schema that is the union of the schemata used
151 across the two steps.
152
153 ## Expressions
154
155 Attribute values are represented by _expressions_. Depending on the concrete
156 syntax in use, an expression may just be a literal value or it may describe
157 a computation in terms of literal values, variables, and functions.
158
159 Each syntax defines its own representation of expressions. For syntaxes based
160 in languages that do not have any non-literal expression syntax, it is
161 recommended to embed the template language from
162 [the native syntax](./hclsyntax/spec.md) e.g. as a post-processing step on
163 string literals.
164
165 ### Expression Evaluation
166
167 In order to obtain a concrete value, each expression must be _evaluated_.
168 Evaluation is performed in terms of an evaluation context, which
169 consists of the following:
170
171 - An _evaluation mode_, which is defined below.
172 - A _variable scope_, which provides a set of named variables for use in
173 expressions.
174 - A _function table_, which provides a set of named functions for use in
175 expressions.
176
177 The _evaluation mode_ allows for two different interpretations of an
178 expression:
179
180 - In _literal-only mode_, variables and functions are not available and it
181 is assumed that the calling application's intent is to treat the attribute
182 value as a literal.
183
184 - In _full expression mode_, variables and functions are defined and it is
185 assumed that the calling application wishes to provide a full expression
186 language for definition of the attribute value.
187
188 The actual behavior of these two modes depends on the syntax in use. For
189 languages with first-class expression syntax, these two modes may be considered
190 equivalent, with _literal-only mode_ simply not defining any variables or
191 functions. For languages that embed arbitrary expressions via string templates,
192 _literal-only mode_ may disable such processing, allowing literal strings to
193 pass through without interpretation as templates.
194
195 Since literal-only mode does not support variables and functions, it is an
196 error for the calling application to enable this mode and yet provide a
197 variable scope and/or function table.
198
199 ## Values and Value Types
200
201 The result of expression evaluation is a _value_. Each value has a _type_,
202 which is dynamically determined during evaluation. The _variable scope_ in
203 the evaluation context is a map from variable name to value, using the same
204 definition of value.
205
206 The type system for HCL values is intended to be of a level abstraction
207 suitable for configuration of various applications. A well-defined,
208 implementation-language-agnostic type system is defined to allow for
209 consistent processing of configuration across many implementation languages.
210 Concrete implementations may provide additional functionality to lower
211 HCL values and types to corresponding native language types, which may then
212 impose additional constraints on the values outside of the scope of this
213 specification.
214
215 Two values are _equal_ if and only if they have identical types and their
216 values are equal according to the rules of their shared type.
217
218 ### Primitive Types
219
220 The primitive types are _string_, _bool_, and _number_.
221
222 A _string_ is a sequence of unicode characters. Two strings are equal if
223 NFC normalization ([UAX#15](http://unicode.org/reports/tr15/)
224 of each string produces two identical sequences of characters.
225 NFC normalization ensures that, for example, a precomposed combination of a
226 latin letter and a diacritic compares equal with the letter followed by
227 a combining diacritic.
228
229 The _bool_ type has only two non-null values: _true_ and _false_. Two bool
230 values are equal if and only if they are either both true or both false.
231
232 A _number_ is an arbitrary-precision floating point value. An implementation
233 _must_ make the full-precision values available to the calling application
234 for interpretation into any suitable number representation. An implementation
235 may in practice implement numbers with limited precision so long as the
236 following constraints are met:
237
238 - Integers are represented with at least 256 bits.
239 - Non-integer numbers are represented as floating point values with a
240 mantissa of at least 256 bits and a signed binary exponent of at least
241 16 bits.
242 - An error is produced if an integer value given in source cannot be
243 represented precisely.
244 - An error is produced if a non-integer value cannot be represented due to
245 overflow.
246 - A non-integer number is rounded to the nearest possible value when a
247 value is of too high a precision to be represented.
248
249 The _number_ type also requires representation of both positive and negative
250 infinity. A "not a number" (NaN) value is _not_ provided nor used.
251
252 Two number values are equal if they are numerically equal to the precision
253 associated with the number. Positive infinity and negative infinity are
254 equal to themselves but not to each other. Positive infinity is greater than
255 any other number value, and negative infinity is less than any other number
256 value.
257
258 Some syntaxes may be unable to represent numeric literals of arbitrary
259 precision. This must be defined in the syntax specification as part of its
260 description of mapping numeric literals to HCL values.
261
262 ### Structural Types
263
264 _Structural types_ are types that are constructed by combining other types.
265 Each distinct combination of other types is itself a distinct type. There
266 are two structural type _kinds_:
267
268 - _Object types_ are constructed of a set of named attributes, each of which
269 has a type. Attribute names are always strings. (_Object_ attributes are a
270 distinct idea from _body_ attributes, though calling applications
271 may choose to blur the distinction by use of common naming schemes.)
272 - _Tuple types_ are constructed of a sequence of elements, each of which
273 has a type.
274
275 Values of structural types are compared for equality in terms of their
276 attributes or elements. A structural type value is equal to another if and
277 only if all of the corresponding attributes or elements are equal.
278
279 Two structural types are identical if they are of the same kind and
280 have attributes or elements with identical types.
281
282 ### Collection Types
283
284 _Collection types_ are types that combine together an arbitrary number of
285 values of some other single type. There are three collection type _kinds_:
286
287 - _List types_ represent ordered sequences of values of their element type.
288 - _Map types_ represent values of their element type accessed via string keys.
289 - _Set types_ represent unordered sets of distinct values of their element type.
290
291 For each of these kinds and each distinct element type there is a distinct
292 collection type. For example, "list of string" is a distinct type from
293 "set of string", and "list of number" is a distinct type from "list of string".
294
295 Values of collection types are compared for equality in terms of their
296 elements. A collection type value is equal to another if and only if both
297 have the same number of elements and their corresponding elements are equal.
298
299 Two collection types are identical if they are of the same kind and have
300 the same element type.
301
302 ### Null values
303
304 Each type has a null value. The null value of a type represents the absence
305 of a value, but with type information retained to allow for type checking.
306
307 Null values are used primarily to represent the conditional absence of a
308 body attribute. In a syntax with a conditional operator, one of the result
309 values of that conditional may be null to indicate that the attribute should be
310 considered not present in that case.
311
312 Calling applications _should_ consider an attribute with a null value as
313 equivalent to the value not being present at all.
314
315 A null value of a particular type is equal to itself.
316
317 ### Unknown Values and the Dynamic Pseudo-type
318
319 An _unknown value_ is a placeholder for a value that is not yet known.
320 Operations on unknown values themselves return unknown values that have a
321 type appropriate to the operation. For example, adding together two unknown
322 numbers yields an unknown number, while comparing two unknown values of any
323 type for equality yields an unknown bool.
324
325 Each type has a distinct unknown value. For example, an unknown _number_ is
326 a distinct value from an unknown _string_.
327
328 _The dynamic pseudo-type_ is a placeholder for a type that is not yet known.
329 The only values of this type are its null value and its unknown value. It is
330 referred to as a _pseudo-type_ because it should not be considered a type in
331 its own right, but rather as a placeholder for a type yet to be established.
332 The unknown value of the dynamic pseudo-type is referred to as _the dynamic
333 value_.
334
335 Operations on values of the dynamic pseudo-type behave as if it is a value
336 of the expected type, optimistically assuming that once the value and type
337 are known they will be valid for the operation. For example, adding together
338 a number and the dynamic value produces an unknown number.
339
340 Unknown values and the dynamic pseudo-type can be used as a mechanism for
341 partial type checking and semantic checking: by evaluating an expression with
342 all variables set to an unknown value, the expression can be evaluated to
343 produce an unknown value of a given type, or produce an error if any operation
344 is provably invalid with only type information.
345
346 Unknown values and the dynamic pseudo-type must never be returned from
347 operations unless at least one operand is unknown or dynamic. Calling
348 applications are guaranteed that unless the global scope includes unknown
349 values, or the function table includes functions that return unknown values,
350 no expression will evaluate to an unknown value. The calling application is
351 thus in total control over the use and meaning of unknown values.
352
353 The dynamic pseudo-type is identical only to itself.
354
355 ### Capsule Types
356
357 A _capsule type_ is a custom type defined by the calling application. A value
358 of a capsule type is considered opaque to HCL, but may be accepted
359 by functions provided by the calling application.
360
361 A particular capsule type is identical only to itself. The equality of two
362 values of the same capsule type is defined by the calling application. No
363 other operations are supported for values of capsule types.
364
365 Support for capsule types in a HCL implementation is optional. Capsule types
366 are intended to allow calling applications to pass through values that are
367 not part of the standard type system. For example, an application that
368 deals with raw binary data may define a capsule type representing a byte
369 array, and provide functions that produce or operate on byte arrays.
370
371 ### Type Specifications
372
373 In certain situations it is necessary to define expectations about the expected
374 type of a value. Whereas two _types_ have a commutative _identity_ relationship,
375 a type has a non-commutative _matches_ relationship with a _type specification_.
376 A type specification is, in practice, just a different interpretation of a
377 type such that:
378
379 - Any type _matches_ any type that it is identical to.
380
381 - Any type _matches_ the dynamic pseudo-type.
382
383 For example, given a type specification "list of dynamic pseudo-type", the
384 concrete types "list of string" and "list of map" match, but the
385 type "set of string" does not.
386
387 ## Functions and Function Calls
388
389 The evaluation context used to evaluate an expression includes a function
390 table, which represents an application-defined set of named functions
391 available for use in expressions.
392
393 Each syntax defines whether function calls are supported and how they are
394 physically represented in source code, but the semantics of function calls are
395 defined here to ensure consistent results across syntaxes and to allow
396 applications to provide functions that are interoperable with all syntaxes.
397
398 A _function_ is defined from the following elements:
399
400 - Zero or more _positional parameters_, each with a name used for documentation,
401 a type specification for expected argument values, and a flag for whether
402 each of null values, unknown values, and values of the dynamic pseudo-type
403 are accepted.
404
405 - Zero or one _variadic parameters_, with the same structure as the _positional_
406 parameters, which if present collects any additional arguments provided at
407 the function call site.
408
409 - A _result type definition_, which specifies the value type returned for each
410 valid sequence of argument values.
411
412 - A _result value definition_, which specifies the value returned for each
413 valid sequence of argument values.
414
415 A _function call_, regardless of source syntax, consists of a sequence of
416 argument values. The argument values are each mapped to a corresponding
417 parameter as follows:
418
419 - For each of the function's positional parameters in sequence, take the next
420 argument. If there are no more arguments, the call is erroneous.
421
422 - If the function has a variadic parameter, take all remaining arguments that
423 where not yet assigned to a positional parameter and collect them into
424 a sequence of variadic arguments that each correspond to the variadic
425 parameter.
426
427 - If the function has _no_ variadic parameter, it is an error if any arguments
428 remain after taking one argument for each positional parameter.
429
430 After mapping each argument to a parameter, semantic checking proceeds
431 for each argument:
432
433 - If the argument value corresponding to a parameter does not match the
434 parameter's type specification, the call is erroneous.
435
436 - If the argument value corresponding to a parameter is null and the parameter
437 is not specified as accepting nulls, the call is erroneous.
438
439 - If the argument value corresponding to a parameter is the dynamic value
440 and the parameter is not specified as accepting values of the dynamic
441 pseudo-type, the call is valid but its _result type_ is forced to be the
442 dynamic pseudo type.
443
444 - If neither of the above conditions holds for any argument, the call is
445 valid and the function's value type definition is used to determine the
446 call's _result type_. A function _may_ vary its result type depending on
447 the argument _values_ as well as the argument _types_; for example, a
448 function that decodes a JSON value will return a different result type
449 depending on the data structure described by the given JSON source code.
450
451 If semantic checking succeeds without error, the call is _executed_:
452
453 - For each argument, if its value is unknown and its corresponding parameter
454 is not specified as accepting unknowns, the _result value_ is forced to be an
455 unknown value of the result type.
456
457 - If the previous condition does not apply, the function's result value
458 definition is used to determine the call's _result value_.
459
460 The result of a function call expression is either an error, if one of the
461 erroneous conditions above applies, or the _result value_.
462
463 ## Type Conversions and Unification
464
465 Values given in configuration may not always match the expectations of the
466 operations applied to them or to the calling application. In such situations,
467 automatic type conversion is attempted as a convenience to the user.
468
469 Along with conversions to a _specified_ type, it is sometimes necessary to
470 ensure that a selection of values are all of the _same_ type, without any
471 constraint on which type that is. This is the process of _type unification_,
472 which attempts to find the most general type that all of the given types can
473 be converted to.
474
475 Both type conversions and unification are defined in the syntax-agnostic
476 model to ensure consistency of behavior between syntaxes.
477
478 Type conversions are broadly characterized into two categories: _safe_ and
479 _unsafe_. A conversion is "safe" if any distinct value of the source type
480 has a corresponding distinct value in the target type. A conversion is
481 "unsafe" if either the target type values are _not_ distinct (information
482 may be lost in conversion) or if some values of the source type do not have
483 any corresponding value in the target type. An unsafe conversion may result
484 in an error.
485
486 A given type can always be converted to itself, which is a no-op.
487
488 ### Conversion of Null Values
489
490 All null values are safely convertable to a null value of any other type,
491 regardless of other type-specific rules specified in the sections below.
492
493 ### Conversion to and from the Dynamic Pseudo-type
494
495 Conversion _from_ the dynamic pseudo-type _to_ any other type always succeeds,
496 producing an unknown value of the target type.
497
498 Conversion of any value _to_ the dynamic pseudo-type is a no-op. The result
499 is the input value, verbatim. This is the only situation where the conversion
500 result value is not of the the given target type.
501
502 ### Primitive Type Conversions
503
504 Bidirectional conversions are available between the string and number types,
505 and between the string and boolean types.
506
507 The bool value true corresponds to the string containing the characters "true",
508 while the bool value false corresponds to the string containing the characters
509 "false". Conversion from bool to string is safe, while the converse is
510 unsafe. The strings "1" and "0" are alternative string representations
511 of true and false respectively. It is an error to convert a string other than
512 the four in this paragraph to type bool.
513
514 A number value is converted to string by translating its integer portion
515 into a sequence of decimal digits (`0` through `9`), and then if it has a
516 non-zero fractional part, a period `.` followed by a sequence of decimal
517 digits representing its fractional part. No exponent portion is included.
518 The number is converted at its full precision. Conversion from number to
519 string is safe.
520
521 A string is converted to a number value by reversing the above mapping.
522 No exponent portion is allowed. Conversion from string to number is unsafe.
523 It is an error to convert a string that does not comply with the expected
524 syntax to type number.
525
526 No direct conversion is available between the bool and number types.
527
528 ### Collection and Structural Type Conversions
529
530 Conversion from set types to list types is _safe_, as long as their
531 element types are safely convertable. If the element types are _unsafely_
532 convertable, then the collection conversion is also unsafe. Each set element
533 becomes a corresponding list element, in an undefined order. Although no
534 particular ordering is required, implementations _should_ produce list
535 elements in a consistent order for a given input set, as a convenience
536 to calling applications.
537
538 Conversion from list types to set types is _unsafe_, as long as their element
539 types are convertable. Each distinct list item becomes a distinct set item.
540 If two list items are equal, one of the two is lost in the conversion.
541
542 Conversion from tuple types to list types permitted if all of the
543 tuple element types are convertable to the target list element type.
544 The safety of the conversion depends on the safety of each of the element
545 conversions. Each element in turn is converted to the list element type,
546 producing a list of identical length.
547
548 Conversion from tuple types to set types is permitted, behaving as if the
549 tuple type was first converted to a list of the same element type and then
550 that list converted to the target set type.
551
552 Conversion from object types to map types is permitted if all of the object
553 attribute types are convertable to the target map element type. The safety
554 of the conversion depends on the safety of each of the attribute conversions.
555 Each attribute in turn is converted to the map element type, and map element
556 keys are set to the name of each corresponding object attribute.
557
558 Conversion from list and set types to tuple types is permitted, following
559 the opposite steps as the converse conversions. Such conversions are _unsafe_.
560 It is an error to convert a list or set to a tuple type whose number of
561 elements does not match the list or set length.
562
563 Conversion from map types to object types is permitted if each map key
564 corresponds to an attribute in the target object type. It is an error to
565 convert from a map value whose set of keys does not exactly match the target
566 type's attributes. The conversion takes the opposite steps of the converse
567 conversion.
568
569 Conversion from one object type to another is permitted as long as the
570 common attribute names have convertable types. Any attribute present in the
571 target type but not in the source type is populated with a null value of
572 the appropriate type.
573
574 Conversion from one tuple type to another is permitted as long as the
575 tuples have the same length and the elements have convertable types.
576
577 ### Type Unification
578
579 Type unification is an operation that takes a list of types and attempts
580 to find a single type to which they can all be converted. Since some
581 type pairs have bidirectional conversions, preference is given to _safe_
582 conversions. In technical terms, all possible types are arranged into
583 a lattice, from which a most general supertype is selected where possible.
584
585 The type resulting from type unification may be one of the input types, or
586 it may be an entirely new type produced by combination of two or more
587 input types.
588
589 The following rules do not guarantee a valid result. In addition to these
590 rules, unification fails if any of the given types are not convertable
591 (per the above rules) to the selected result type.
592
593 The following unification rules apply transitively. That is, if a rule is
594 defined from A to B, and one from B to C, then A can unify to C.
595
596 Number and bool types both unify with string by preferring string.
597
598 Two collection types of the same kind unify according to the unification
599 of their element types.
600
601 List and set types unify by preferring the list type.
602
603 Map and object types unify by preferring the object type.
604
605 List, set and tuple types unify by preferring the tuple type.
606
607 The dynamic pseudo-type unifies with any other type by selecting that other
608 type. The dynamic pseudo-type is the result type only if _all_ input types
609 are the dynamic pseudo-type.
610
611 Two object types unify by constructing a new type whose attributes are
612 the union of those of the two input types. Any common attributes themselves
613 have their types unified.
614
615 Two tuple types of the same length unify constructing a new type of the
616 same length whose elements are the unification of the corresponding elements
617 in the two input types.
618
619 ## Static Analysis
620
621 In most applications, full expression evaluation is sufficient for understanding
622 the provided configuration. However, some specialized applications require more
623 direct access to the physical structures in the expressions, which can for
624 example allow the construction of new language constructs in terms of the
625 existing syntax elements.
626
627 Since static analysis analyses the physical structure of configuration, the
628 details will vary depending on syntax. Each syntax must decide which of its
629 physical structures corresponds to the following analyses, producing error
630 diagnostics if they are applied to inappropriate expressions.
631
632 The following are the required static analysis functions:
633
634 - **Static List**: Require list/tuple construction syntax to be used and
635 return a list of expressions for each of the elements given.
636
637 - **Static Map**: Require map/object construction syntax to be used and
638 return a list of key/value pairs -- both expressions -- for each of
639 the elements given. The usual constraint that a map key must be a string
640 must not apply to this analysis, thus allowing applications to interpret
641 arbitrary keys as they see fit.
642
643 - **Static Call**: Require function call syntax to be used and return an
644 object describing the called function name and a list of expressions
645 representing each of the call arguments.
646
647 - **Static Traversal**: Require a reference to a symbol in the variable
648 scope and return a description of the path from the root scope to the
649 accessed attribute or index.
650
651 The intent of a calling application using these features is to require a more
652 rigid interpretation of the configuration than in expression evaluation.
653 Syntax implementations should make use of the extra contextual information
654 provided in order to make an intuitive mapping onto the constructs of the
655 underlying syntax, possibly interpreting the expression slightly differently
656 than it would be interpreted in normal evaluation.
657
658 Each syntax must define which of its expression elements each of the analyses
659 above applies to, and how those analyses behave given those expression elements.
660
661 ## Implementation Considerations
662
663 Implementations of this specification are free to adopt any strategy that
664 produces behavior consistent with the specification. This non-normative
665 section describes some possible implementation strategies that are consistent
666 with the goals of this specification.
667
668 ### Language-agnosticism
669
670 The language-agnosticism of this specification assumes that certain behaviors
671 are implemented separately for each syntax:
672
673 - Matching of a body schema with the physical elements of a body in the
674 source language, to determine correspondence between physical constructs
675 and schema elements.
676
677 - Implementing the _dynamic attributes_ body processing mode by either
678 interpreting all physical constructs as attributes or producing an error
679 if non-attribute constructs are present.
680
681 - Providing an evaluation function for all possible expressions that produces
682 a value given an evaluation context.
683
684 - Providing the static analysis functionality described above in a manner that
685 makes sense within the convention of the syntax.
686
687 The suggested implementation strategy is to use an implementation language's
688 closest concept to an _abstract type_, _virtual type_ or _interface type_
689 to represent both Body and Expression. Each language-specific implementation
690 can then provide an implementation of each of these types wrapping AST nodes
691 or other physical constructs from the language parser.