This post by David Barbour is one of the most insightful statements on macros I have read (along with
Vladimir Sedach's analysis):
It has been my impression that, no matter what specific thing you use macros to do, you can later invent a neat language feature that handles the problem in a clean and nice manner. The problem is the "later". Macros can do it "now"... in an ugly, brutish manner, true, but the job gets done. ...
Even among people who find macros smelly, you'll find many who think macros the least distasteful of these choices.
John Shutt's
response ties this in with fexprs - instead of delegating the job to a separate preprocessing step, let the language itself have the power of self-extension:
Macros are an unpleasant feature to compensate, somewhat, for limitations of a language. It's better to compensate for the limitations than to leave the limitations in place without compensating at all. Better still, though, would be to eliminate the offending limitations. (Remove the weaknesses and restrictions that make additional features appear necessary.) Make no mistake, fexprs don't necessarily increase the uniform flexibility of the language; but with care in the design they can do so, and thereby, the jobs otherwise done by macros are brought within the purview of the elegant language core. So instead of an ugly brutish fix with macros now and hope for a more elegant replacement later, one can produce a clean solution now with fexprs.
PS: This point is subtle. After all Scheme is already self-extensible. But Scheme macros still are an additional "layer" on top of, and separate from, the core language.
Kernel's fexprs are not - they are the core language, thus bringing self-extension
within the purview of the elegant language core.
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