7.5 Limited Types
1/2
A limited type is (a view of) a type for which copying
(such as for an assignment_statement) is not
allowed. A nonlimited type is a (view of a) type for which copying is
allowed.
Legality Rules
2/2
If a tagged record type has any limited components,
then the reserved word limited shall appear in its record_type_definition.
If the reserved word limited appears in the definition of a derived_type_definition,
its parent type and any progenitor interfaces shall be limited.
2.1/2
In the following
contexts, an expression of a limited type
is not permitted unless it is an aggregate,
a function_call, or a parenthesized expression
or qualified_expression whose operand is permitted
by this rule:
2.2/2
- the initialization expression
of an object_declaration (see 3.3.1)
2.3/2
- the default_expression
of a component_declaration (see 3.8)
2.4/2
- the expression
of a record_component_association (see 4.3.1)
2.5/2
- the expression
for an ancestor_part of an extension_aggregate
(see 4.3.2)
2.6/2
- an expression
of a positional_array_aggregate or the expression
of an array_component_association (see 4.3.3)
2.7/2
- the qualified_expression
of an initialized allocator (see 4.8)
2.8/2
- the expression
of a return statement (see 6.5)
2.9/2
- the default_expression
or actual parameter for a formal object of mode in (see 12.4)
Static Semantics
3/2
A
type is
limited if it is one of the following:
4/2
- a type with the reserved word limited,
synchronized, task, or protected in its definition;
5/2
- This
paragraph was deleted.
6/2
- a composite type with a limited component;
6.1/2
- a derived type whose parent is limited
and is not an interface.
7
Otherwise, the type is nonlimited.
8
There are no predefined equality operators for a
limited type.
Implementation Requirements
8.1/2
For an aggregate of
a limited type used to initialize an object as allowed above, the implementation
shall not create a separate anonymous object for the aggregate.
For a function_call of a type with a part
that is of a task, protected, or explicitly limited record type that
is used to initialize an object as allowed above, the implementation
shall not create a separate return object (see 6.5) for the function_call.
The aggregate or function_call
shall be constructed directly in the new object.
9/2
14 While it is allowed to write initializations
of limited objects, such initializations never copy a limited object.
The source of such an assignment operation must be an aggregate
or function_call, and such aggregates
and function_calls must be built directly
in the target object.
Paragraphs 10 through
15 were deleted.
16
15
As
illustrated in
7.3.1, an untagged limited
type can become nonlimited under certain circumstances.
Examples
17
Example of a package
with a limited type:
18
package IO_Package is
type File_Name is limited private;
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procedure Open (F : in out File_Name);
procedure Close(F : in out File_Name);
procedure Read (F : in File_Name; Item : out Integer);
procedure Write(F : in File_Name; Item : in Integer);
private
type File_Name is
limited record
Internal_Name : Integer := 0;
end record;
end IO_Package;
20
package body IO_Package is
Limit : constant := 200;
type File_Descriptor is record ... end record;
Directory : array (1 .. Limit) of File_Descriptor;
...
procedure Open (F : in out File_Name) is ... end;
procedure Close(F : in out File_Name) is ... end;
procedure Read (F : in File_Name; Item : out Integer) is ... end;
procedure Write(F : in File_Name; Item : in Integer) is ... end;
begin
...
end IO_Package;
21
16 Notes on the example: In the
example above, an outside subprogram making use of IO_Package may obtain
a file name by calling Open and later use it in calls to Read and Write.
Thus, outside the package, a file name obtained from Open acts as a kind
of password; its internal properties (such as containing a numeric value)
are not known and no other operations (such as addition or comparison
of internal names) can be performed on a file name. Most importantly,
clients of the package cannot make copies of objects of type File_Name.
22
This example is characteristic of any case where complete
control over the operations of a type is desired. Such packages serve
a dual purpose. They prevent a user from making use of the internal structure
of the type. They also implement the notion of an encapsulated data type
where the only operations on the type are those given in the package
specification.
23/2
The fact that the full view of File_Name is explicitly
declared
limited means that parameter passing will always be by
reference and function results will always be built directly in the result
object (see
6.2 and
6.5).