One of my favorite programming constructs in GFA-BASIC is, and always has always been, the On value GoXxx statements. Although, I must admit, there was a time I doubt the usefulness and legality of this command, because C/C++ doesn’t offer such a branch instruction. At those times I was under the impression that it was a typical BASIC overkill command. However, it is definitely not, on the contrary! These statements let GFA-BASIC produce optimized branching code through the use of jump tables. C/C++ compilers can do this only when their ‘optimize to fast code’ - switch is set. Since C/C++ doesn’t support jump tables as a language construct, these compilers crunch together a switch/case block and try to turn it in a jump table just like GFA-BASIC does by default. These are the statements that produce highly optimized branching code without setting a compiler option.
On n GoSub label1, label2, …
On n GoTo label1, label2, …
On n Call Proc1, Proc2, …
My most favorite version is On GoSub. This allows for executing local subroutines labeled by a Label: and ended with a Return statement. This version is not compatible to C/C++, these compilers produce code compatible to GFA-BASIC’s On GoTo.
Not in an Editor Extension
As I mostly program editor extensions, I was surprised to got in problems with these branch statements. GFA-BASIC, like Visual C++, creates a jump table at the end of a function/procedure. However GFA-BASIC hard-wires the address of the jump table, with the presumption that the code starts at $400000 (hInstance). With dynamically loaded GLLs, that place was reserved for the IDE executable image (that is where the code is loaded). When the GLL reaches the execution of the On GoSub code it reads the execution address of the labels from the IDE’s code text section. To the GLL this code contains rubbish. When the GLL is loaded not all the addresses in the GLL code aren’t updated correctly.
As my goal is to create code as efficient as possible, I am a bit disappointed and maybe I will try to fix the GLL-loader.
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