1 Time-stamp: <2004-04-19 22:54:32 blp>
3 What Ben's working on now.
4 --------------------------
6 Update q2c input format description.
8 Rewrite output subsystem, break into multiple processes.
10 CROSSTABS needs to be re-examined.
12 RANK, which is needed for the Wilcoxon signed-rank statistic, Mann-Whitney U,
13 Kruskal-Wallis on NPAR TESTS and for Spearman and the Johnkheere trend test (in
19 Add compression to casefiles.
21 Expressions need to be able to abbreviate function names. XDATE.QUARTER
22 abbreviates to XDA.QUA, etc.
24 The expression tests need tests for XDATE and a few others, see
25 tests/xforms/expressions.sh comments for details.
27 Expressions need random distribution functions.
29 There needs to be another layer onto the lexer, which should probably be
30 entirely rewritten anyway. The lexer needs to read entire *commands* at a
31 time, not just a *line* at a time. It also needs to support arbitrary putback,
32 probably by just backing up the "current position" in the command buffer.
34 Scratch variables should not be available for use following TEMPORARY.
36 Details of N OF CASES, SAMPLE, FILTER, PROCESS IF, TEMPORARY, etc., need to be
37 checked against the documentation. See notes on these at end of file for a
40 Check our results against the NIST StRD benchmark results at
41 strd.itl.nist.gov/div898/strd
43 In debug mode hash table code should verify that collisions are reasonably low.
45 Use AFM files instead of Groff font files, and include AFMs for our default
46 fonts with the distribution.
48 Add libplot output driver. Suggested by Robert S. Maier
49 <rsm@math.arizona.edu>: "it produces output in idraw-editable PS format, PCL5
50 format, xfig-editable format, Illustrator format,..., and can draw vector
51 graphics on X11 displays also".
53 Storage of value labels on disk is inefficient. Invent new data structure.
55 Add an output flag which would cause a page break if a table segment could fit
56 vertically on a page but it just happens to be positioned such that it won't.
58 Fix spanned joint cells, i.e., EDLEVEL on crosstabs.stat.
62 PostScript driver should emit thin lines, then thick lines, to optimize time
65 New functions? var_name_or_label(), tab_value_or_label()
67 Should be able to bottom-justify cells. It'll be expensive, though, by
68 requiring an extra metrics call.
70 Perhaps instead of the current lines we should define the following line types:
71 null, thin, thick, double. It might look pretty classy.
73 Perhaps thick table borders that are cut off by a page break should decay to
74 thin borders. (i.e., on a thick bordered table that's longer than one page,
75 but narrow, the bottom border would be thin on the first page, and the top and
76 bottom borders on middle pages.)
78 Support multi-line titles on tables. (For the first page only, presumably.)
80 Rewrite the convert_F() function in data-out.c to be nicer code.
82 In addition to searching the source directory, we should search the current
83 directory (for data files). (Yuck!)
85 Fix line-too-long problems in PostScript code, instead of covering them up.
86 setlinecap is *not* a proper solution.
88 Need a better way than MAX_WORKSPACE to detect low-memory conditions.
90 When malloc() returns 0, page to disk and free() unnecessary data.
92 Remove ccase * argument from procfunc argument to procedure().
94 See if process_active_file() has wider applicability.
96 Eliminate private data in struct variable through use of pointers.
100 Has glob.c been pared down enough?
102 Improve interactivity of output by allowing a `commit' function for a page.
103 This will also allow for infinite-length pages.
105 All the tests need to be looked over. Some of the SET calls don't make sense
108 Implement thin single lines, should be pretty easy now.
110 SELECT IF should be moved before other transformations whenever possible. It
111 should only be impossible when one of the variables referred to in SELECT IF is
112 created or modified by a previous transformation.
114 The manual: add text, add index entries, add examples.
116 The inline file should be improved: There should be *real* detection of whether
117 it is used (in dfm.c:cmd_begin_data), not after-the-fact detection.
119 Figure out a stylesheet for messages displayed by PSPP: i.e., what quotation
120 marks around filenames, etc.
122 Data input and data output are currently arranged in reciprocal pairs: input is
123 done directly, with write_record() or whatever; output is done on a callback
124 event-driven basis. It would definitely be easier if both could be done on a
125 direct basis, with read_record() and write_record() routines, with a coroutine
126 implementation (see Knuth). But I'm not sure that coroutines can be
127 implemented in ANSI C. This will require some thought. Perhaps 0.4.0 can do
130 New SET subcommand: OUTPUT. i.e., SET OUTPUT="filename" to send output to that
131 file; SET OUTPUT="filename"(APPEND) to append to that file; SET OUTPUT=DEFAULT
132 to reset everything. There might be a better approach, though--think about it.
134 HDF export capabilities (http://hdf.ncsa.uiuc.edu). Suggested by Marcus
135 G. Daniels <mgd@santafe.edu>.
137 From Zvi Grauer <z.grauer@csuohio.edu> and <zvi@mail.ohio.net>:
139 1. design of experiments software, specifically Factorial, response surface
140 methodology and mixrture design.
142 These would be EXTREMELY USEFUL for chemists, engineeris, and anyone
143 involved in the production of chemicals or formulations.
145 2. Multidimensional Scaling analysis (for market analysis) -
147 3. Preference mapping software for market analysis
149 4. Hierarchical clustering (as well as partition clustering)
153 6. Categorical data analsys ?
158 In addition to an "infinite journal", we should keep a number of
159 individual-session journals, pspp.jnl-1 through pspp.jnl-X, renaming and
160 deleting as needed. All of the journals should have date/time comments.
162 Qualifiers for variables giving type--categorical, ordinal, ...
166 Consider consequences of xmalloc(), fail(), hcf() in interactive
168 a. Can we safely just use setjmp()/longjmp()?
169 b. Will that leak memory?
170 i. I don't think so: all procedure-created memory is either
171 garbage-collected or globally-accessible.
172 ii. But you never know... esp. w/o Checker.
173 c. Is this too early to worry? too late?
175 Need to implement a shared buffer for funny functions that require relatively
176 large permanent transient buffers (1024 bytes or so), that is, buffers that are
177 permanent in the sense that they probably shouldn't be deallocated but are only
178 used from time to time, buffers that can't be allocated on the stack because
179 they are of variable and unpredictable but usually relatively small (usually
180 line buffers). There are too many of these lurking around; can save a sizeable
181 amount of space at very little overhead and with very little effort by merging
184 Clever multiplatform GUI idea (due partly to John Williams): write a GUI in
185 Java where each statistical procedure dialog box could be downloaded from the
186 server independently. The statistical procedures would run on (the/a) server
187 and results would be reported through HTML tables viewed with the user's choice
188 of web browsers. Help could be implemented through the browser as well.
190 Design a plotting API, with scatterplots, line plots, pie charts, barcharts,
191 Pareto plots, etc., as subclasses of the plot superclass.
196 1. How to add an operator for use in PSPP expressions:
198 a. Add the operator to the enumerated type at the top of expr.h. If the
199 operator has arguments (i.e., it's not a terminal) then add it *before*
200 OP_TERMINAL; otherwise, add it *after* OP_TERMINAL. All these begin with OP_.
202 b. If the operator's a terminal then you'll want to design a structure to hold
203 its content. Add the structure to the union any_node. (You can also reuse one
204 of the prefab structures, of course.)
206 c. Now switch to expr-prs.c--the module for expression parsing. Insert the
207 operator somewhere in the precedence hierarchy.
209 (1) If you're adding a operator that is a function (like ACOS, ABS, etc.) then
210 add the function to functab in `void init_functab(void)'. Order is not
211 important here. The first element is the function name, like "ACOS". The
212 second is the operator enumerator you added in expr.h, like OP_ARCOS. The
213 third element is the C function to parse the PSPP function. The predefined
214 functions will probably suit your needs, but if not, you can write your own.
215 The fourth element is an argument to the parsing function; it's only used
216 currently by generic_str_func(), which handles a rather general syntax for
217 functions that return strings; see the comment at the beginning of its code for
220 (2) If you're adding an actual operator you'll have to put a function in
221 between two of the operators there already in functions `exprtype
222 parse_*(any_node **n)'. Each of these stores the tree for its result into *n,
223 and returns the result type, or EX_ERROR on error. Be sure to delete all the
224 allocated memory on error before returning.
226 d. Add the operator to the table `op_desc ops[OP_SENTINEL+1]' in expr-prs.c,
227 which has an entry for every operator. These entries *must* be in the same
228 order as they are in expr.h. The entries have the form `op(A,B,C,D)'. A is
229 the name of the operator as it should be printed in a postfix output format.
230 For example, the addition operator is printed as `plus'. B is a bitmapped set
233 * Set the 001 bit (OP_VAR_ARGS) if the operator takes a variable number of
234 arguments. If a function can take, say, two args or three args, but no other
235 numbers of args, this is a poor way to do it--instead implement the operator as
236 two separate operators, one with two args, the other with three. (The main
237 effect of this bit is to cause the number of arguments to be output to the
238 postfix form so that the expression evaluator can know how many args the
239 operator takes. It also causes the expression optimizer to calculate the
240 needed stack height differently, without referencing C.)
242 * Set the 002 bit (OP_MIN_ARGS) if the operator can take an optional `dotted
243 argument' that specified the minimum number of non-SYSMIS arguments in order to
244 have a non-SYSMIS result. For instance, MIN.3(e1,e2,e3,e4,e5) returns a
245 non-SYSMIS result only if at least 3 out of 5 of the expressions e1 to e5 are
248 Minargs are passed in the nonterm_node structure in `arg[]''s elements past
249 `n'--search expr-prs.c for the words `terrible crock' for an example of this.
251 Minargs are output to the postfix form. A default value is output if none was
252 specified by the user.
254 You can use minargs for anything you want--they're not limited to actually
255 describing a minimum number of valid arguments; that's just what they're most
258 * Set the 004 bit (OP_FMT_SPEC) if the operator has an argument that is a
259 format specifier. (This causes the format specifier to be output to the
260 postfix representation.)
262 Format specs are passed in the nonterm_node structure in the same way as
263 minargs, except that there are three args, in this order: type, width, # of
264 decimals--search expr-prs.c for the words `is a crock' for an example of this.
266 * Set the 010 bit (OP_ABSORB_MISS) if the operator can *ever* have a result of
267 other than SYSMIS when given one or more arguments of SYSMIS. Operators
268 lacking this bit and known to have a SYSMIS argument are short-circuited to
269 SYSMIS by the expression optimizer.
271 * If your operator doesn't fit easily into the existing categories,
272 congratulations, you get to write lots of code to adjust everything to cope
273 with this new operator. Are you really sure you want to do that?
275 C is the effect the operator has on stack height. Set this to `varies' if the
276 operator has a variable number of arguments. Otherwise this 1, minus the
277 number of arguments the operator has. (Since terminals have no arguments, they
278 have a value of +1 for this; other operators have a value of 0 or less.)
280 D is the number of items output to the postfix form after the operator proper.
281 This is 0, plus 1 if the operator has varargs, plus 1 if the operator has
282 minargs, plus 3 if the operator has a format spec. Note that minargs/varargs
283 can't coexist with a format spec on the same operator as currently coded. Some
284 terminals also have a nonzero value for this but don't fit into the above
287 e. Switch to expr-opt.c. Add code to evaluate_tree() to evaluate the
288 expression when all arguments are known to be constants. Pseudo-random
289 functions can't be evaluated even if their arguments are constants. If the
290 function can be optimized even if its arguments aren't all known constants, add
291 code to optimize_tree() to do it.
293 f. Switch to expr-evl.c. Add code to evaluate_expression() to evaluate the
294 expression. You must be absolutely certain that the code in evaluate_tree(),
295 optimize_tree(), and evaluate_expression() will always return the same results,
296 otherwise users will get inconsistent results, a Bad Thing. You must be
297 certain that even on boundary conditions users will get identical results, for
298 instance for the values 0, 1, -1, SYSMIS, or, for string functions, the null
299 string, 1-char strings, and 255-char strings.
301 g. Test the code. Write some test syntax files. Examine the output carefully.
303 NOTES ON SEARCH ALGORITHMS
304 --------------------------
306 1. Trees are nicer when you want a sorted table. However, you can always
307 sort a hash table after you're done adding values.
309 2. Brent's variation of Algorithm D is best when the table is fixed: it's
310 memory-efficient, having small, fixed overhead. It's easier to use
311 when you know in advance how many entries the table will contain.
313 3. Algorithm L is rather slow for a hash algorithm, however it's easy.
315 4. Chaining is best in terms of speed; ordered/self-ordering is even
318 5. Rehashing is slow.
320 6. Might want to decide on an algorithm empirically since there are no
321 clear mathematical winners in some cases.
323 7. gprof? Hey, it works!
325 MORE NOTES/IDEAS/BUGS
326 ---------------------
328 The behavior of converting a floating point to an integer when the value of the
329 float is out of range of the integer type is UNDEFINED! See ANSI 6.2.1.3.
331 What should we do for *negative* times in expressions?
333 Sometimes very wide (or very tall) columns can occur in tables. What is a good
334 way to truncate them? It doesn't seem to cause problems for the ascii or
335 postscript drivers, but it's not good in the general case. Should they be
336 split somehow? (One way that wide columns can occur is through user request,
337 for instance through a wide PRINT request--try time-date.stat with a narrow
338 ascii page or with the postscript driver on letter size paper.)
340 NULs in input files break the products we're replacing: although it will input
341 them properly and display them properly as AHEX format, it truncates them in A
342 format. Also, string-manipulation functions such as CONCAT truncate their
343 results after the first NUL. This should simplify the result of PSPP design.
344 Perhaps those ugly a_string, b_string, ..., can all be eliminated.
346 From Moshe Braner <mbraner@nessie.vdh.state.vt.us>: An idea regarding MATCH
347 FILES, again getting BEYOND the state of SPSS: it always bothered me that if I
348 have a large data file and I want to match it to a small lookup table, via
349 MATCH FILES FILE= /TABLE= /BY key, I need to SORT the large file on key, do the
350 match, then (usually) re-sort back into the order I really want it. There is
351 no reason to do this, when the lookup table is small. Even a dumb sequential
352 search through the table, for every case in the big file, is better, in some
353 cases, than the sort. So here's my idea: first look at the /TABLE file, if it
354 is "small enough", read it into memory, and create an index (or hash table,
355 whatever) for it. Then read the /FILE and use the index to match to each case.
356 OTOH, if the /TABLE is too large, then do it the old way, complaining if either
357 file is not sorted on key.
359 ----------------------------------------------------------------------
360 Statistical procedures:
362 For each case we read from the input program:
364 1. Execute permanent transformations. If these drop the case, stop.
365 2. N OF CASES. If we have already written N cases, stop.
366 3. Write case to replacement active file.
367 4. Execute temporary transformations. If these drop the case, stop.
368 5. Post-TEMPORARY N OF CASES. If we have already analyzed N cases, stop.
369 6. FILTER, PROCESS IF. If these drop the case, go to 5.
370 7. Pass case to procedure.
374 LAG records cases in step 3.
376 AGGREGATE: When output goes to an external file, this is just an ordinary
377 procedure. When output goes to the active file, step 3 should be skipped,
378 because AGGREGATE creates its own case sink and writes to it in step 7. Also,
379 TEMPORARY has no effect and we just cancel it. Regardless of direction of
380 output, we should not implement AGGREGATE through a transformation because that
381 will fail to honor FILTER, PROCESS IF, N OF CASES.
383 ADD FILES: Essentially an input program. It silently cancels unclosed LOOPs
384 and DO IFs. If the active file is used for input, then runs EXECUTE (if there
385 are any transformations) and then steals vfm_source and encapsulates it. If
386 the active file is not used for input, then it cancels all the transformations
387 and deletes the original active file.
393 MATCH FILES: Similar to AGGREGATE. This is a procedure. When the active file
394 is used for input, it reads the active file; otherwise, it just cancels all the
395 transformations and deletes the original active file. Step 3 should be
396 skipped, because MATCH FILES creates its own case sink and writes to it in step
397 7. TEMPORARY is not allowed.
405 UPDATE: same as ADD FILES.
408 ----------------------------------------------------------------------
411 * Before TEMPORARY, limits number of cases sent to the sink.
413 * After TEMPORARY, limits number of cases sent to the procedure.
415 * Without TEMPORARY, those are the same cases, so it limits both.
419 * Sample is just a transformation. It has no special properties.
423 * Always selects cases sent to the procedure.
425 * No effect on cases sent to sink.
427 * Before TEMPORARY, selection is permanent. After TEMPORARY,
428 selection stops after a procedure.
432 * Always selects cases sent to the procedure.
434 * No effect on cases sent to sink.
436 * Always stops after a procedure.
440 * Ignored by AGGREGATE. Used when procedures write matrices.
442 * Always applies to the procedure.
444 * Before TEMPORARY, splitting is permanent. After TEMPORARY,
445 splitting stops after a procedure.
449 * TEMPORARY has no effect on AGGREGATE when output goes to the active file.
451 * SORT CASES, ADD FILES, RENAME VARIABLES, CASESTOVARS, VARSTOCASES,
452 COMPUTE with a lag function cannot be used after TEMPORARY.
454 * Cannot be used in DO IF...END IF or LOOP...END LOOP.
456 * FLIP ignores TEMPORARY. All transformations become permanent.
458 * MATCH FILES and UPDATE cannot be used after TEMPORARY if active
459 file is an input source.
461 * RENAME VARIABLES is invalid after TEMPORARY.
463 * WEIGHT, SPLIT FILE, N OF CASES, FILTER, PROCESS IF apply only to
464 the next procedure when used after TEMPORARY.
468 * Always applies to the procedure.
470 * Before TEMPORARY, weighting is permanent. After TEMPORARY,
471 weighting stops after a procedure.
474 -------------------------------------------------------------------------------