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In
computer science Computer science is the study of computation, information, and automation. Computer science spans Theoretical computer science, theoretical disciplines (such as algorithms, theory of computation, and information theory) to Applied science, ...
, a continuation is an abstract representation of the control state of a
computer program A computer program is a sequence or set of instructions in a programming language for a computer to Execution (computing), execute. It is one component of software, which also includes software documentation, documentation and other intangibl ...
. A continuation implements ( reifies) the program control state, i.e. the continuation is a data structure that represents the computational process at a given point in the process's execution; the created data structure can be accessed by the programming language, instead of being hidden in the
runtime environment In computer programming, a runtime system or runtime environment is a sub-system that exists in the computer where a program is created, as well as in the computers where the program is intended to be run. The name comes from the compile time ...
. Continuations are useful for encoding other control mechanisms in programming languages such as exceptions, generators, coroutines, and so on. The "current continuation" or "continuation of the computation step" is the continuation that, from the perspective of running code, would be derived from the current point in a program's execution. The term ''continuations'' can also be used to refer to first-class continuations, which are constructs that give a
programming language A programming language is a system of notation for writing computer programs. Programming languages are described in terms of their Syntax (programming languages), syntax (form) and semantics (computer science), semantics (meaning), usually def ...
the ability to save the execution state at any point and return to that point at a later point in the program, possibly multiple times.


History

The earliest description of continuations was made by Adriaan van Wijngaarden in September 1964. Wijngaarden spoke at the IFIP Working Conference on Formal Language Description Languages held in Baden bei Wien, Austria. As part of a formulation for an
Algol 60 ALGOL 60 (short for ''Algorithmic Language 1960'') is a member of the ALGOL family of computer programming languages. It followed on from ALGOL 58 which had introduced code blocks and the begin and end pairs for delimiting them, representing a ...
preprocessor, he called for a transformation of proper procedures into continuation-passing style, though he did not use this name, and his intention was to simplify a program and thus make its result more clear. Christopher Strachey, Christopher P. Wadsworth and John C. Reynolds brought the term ''continuation'' into prominence in their work in the field of
denotational semantics In computer science, denotational semantics (initially known as mathematical semantics or Scott–Strachey semantics) is an approach of formalizing the meanings of programming languages by constructing mathematical objects (called ''denotations'' ...
that makes extensive use of continuations to allow sequential programs to be analysed in terms of
functional programming In computer science, functional programming is a programming paradigm where programs are constructed by Function application, applying and Function composition (computer science), composing Function (computer science), functions. It is a declarat ...
semantics. Steve Russell invented the continuation in his second
Lisp Lisp (historically LISP, an abbreviation of "list processing") is a family of programming languages with a long history and a distinctive, fully parenthesized Polish notation#Explanation, prefix notation. Originally specified in the late 1950s, ...
implementation for the
IBM 704 The IBM 704 is the model name of a large digital computer, digital mainframe computer introduced by IBM in 1954. Designed by John Backus and Gene Amdahl, it was the first mass-produced computer with hardware for floating-point arithmetic. The I ...
, though he did not name it. gives a complete history of the discovery of continuations.


First-class continuations

First-class continuations are a language's ability to completely control the execution order of instructions. They can be used to jump to a function that produced the call to the current function, or to a function that has previously exited. One can think of a first-class continuation as saving the ''execution'' state of the program. True first-class continuations do not save program data – unlike a process image – only the execution context. This is illustrated by the "continuation sandwich" description:
''Say you're in the kitchen in front of the refrigerator, thinking about a sandwich. You take a continuation right there and stick it in your pocket. Then you get some turkey and bread out of the refrigerator and make yourself a sandwich, which is now sitting on the counter. You invoke the continuation in your pocket, and you find yourself standing in front of the refrigerator again, thinking about a sandwich. But fortunately, there's a sandwich on the counter, and all the materials used to make it are gone. So you eat it. :-)''
In this description, the sandwich is part of the program ''data'' (e.g., an object on the heap), and rather than calling a "make sandwich" routine and then returning, the person called a "make sandwich with current continuation" routine, which creates the sandwich and then continues where execution left off. Scheme was the first full production system providing first "catch" and then call/cc. Bruce Duba introduced call/cc into SML. Continuations are also used in models of computation including
denotational semantics In computer science, denotational semantics (initially known as mathematical semantics or Scott–Strachey semantics) is an approach of formalizing the meanings of programming languages by constructing mathematical objects (called ''denotations'' ...
, the
actor model The actor model in computer science is a mathematical model of concurrent computation that treats an ''actor'' as the basic building block of concurrent computation. In response to a message it receives, an actor can: make local decisions, create ...
, process calculi, and
lambda calculus In mathematical logic, the lambda calculus (also written as ''λ''-calculus) is a formal system for expressing computability, computation based on function Abstraction (computer science), abstraction and function application, application using var ...
. These models rely on programmers or semantics engineers to write mathematical functions in the so-called continuation-passing style. This means that each function consumes a function that represents the rest of the computation relative to this function call. To return a value, the function calls this "continuation function" with a return value; to abort the computation it returns a value. Functional programmers who write their programs in continuation-passing style gain the expressive power to manipulate the flow of control in arbitrary ways. The cost is that they must maintain the invariants of control and continuations by hand, which can be a highly complex undertaking (but see 'continuation-passing style' below).


Uses

Continuations simplify and clarify the implementation of several common design patterns, including coroutines/ green threads and exception handling, by providing the basic, low-level primitive which unifies these seemingly unconnected patterns. Continuations can provide elegant solutions to some difficult high-level problems, like programming a web server that supports multiple pages, accessed by the use of the forward and back buttons and by following links. The
Smalltalk Smalltalk is a purely object oriented programming language (OOP) that was originally created in the 1970s for educational use, specifically for constructionist learning, but later found use in business. It was created at Xerox PARC by Learni ...
Seaside web framework uses continuations to great effect, allowing one to program the web server in procedural style, by switching continuations when switching pages. More complex constructs for which ''"continuations provide an elegant description"'' also exist. For example, in C, longjmp can be used to jump from the middle of one function to another, provided the second function lies deeper in the stack (if it is waiting for the first function to return, possibly among others). Other more complex examples include coroutines in Simula 67, Lua, and
Perl Perl is a high-level, general-purpose, interpreted, dynamic programming language. Though Perl is not officially an acronym, there are various backronyms in use, including "Practical Extraction and Reporting Language". Perl was developed ...
; tasklets in Stackless Python; generators in
Icon An icon () is a religious work of art, most commonly a painting, in the cultures of the Eastern Orthodox, Oriental Orthodox, Catholic Church, Catholic, and Lutheranism, Lutheran churches. The most common subjects include Jesus, Mary, mother of ...
and Python; continuations in Scala (starting in 2.8);
fibers Fiber (spelled fibre in British English; from ) is a natural or artificial substance that is significantly longer than it is wide. Fibers are often used in the manufacture of other materials. The strongest engineering materials often inco ...
in
Ruby Ruby is a pinkish-red-to-blood-red-colored gemstone, a variety of the mineral corundum ( aluminium oxide). Ruby is one of the most popular traditional jewelry gems and is very durable. Other varieties of gem-quality corundum are called sapph ...
(starting in 1.9.1); the backtracking mechanism in
Prolog Prolog is a logic programming language that has its origins in artificial intelligence, automated theorem proving, and computational linguistics. Prolog has its roots in first-order logic, a formal logic. Unlike many other programming language ...
; monads in
functional programming In computer science, functional programming is a programming paradigm where programs are constructed by Function application, applying and Function composition (computer science), composing Function (computer science), functions. It is a declarat ...
; and threads.


Examples

The Scheme programming language includes the control operator call-with-current-continuation (abbreviated as: call/cc) with which a Scheme program can manipulate the flow of control: (define the-continuation #f) (define (test) (let ((i 0)) ; call/cc calls its first function argument, passing ; a continuation variable representing this point in ; the program as the argument to that function. ; ; In this case, the function argument assigns that ; continuation to the variable the-continuation. ; (call/cc (lambda (k) (set! the-continuation k))) ; ; The next time the-continuation is called, we start here. (set! i (+ i 1)) i)) Using the above, the following code block defines a function test that sets the-continuation to the future execution state of itself: > (test) 1 > (the-continuation) 2 > (the-continuation) 3 > ; stores the current continuation (which will print 4 next) away > (define another-continuation the-continuation) > (test) ; resets the-continuation 1 > (the-continuation) 2 > (another-continuation) ; uses the previously stored continuation 4 For a gentler introduction to this mechanism, see call-with-current-continuation.


Coroutines

This example shows a possible usage of continuations to implement coroutines as separate threads. ;;; A naive queue for thread scheduling. ;;; It holds a list of continuations "waiting to run". (define *queue* '()) (define (empty-queue?) (null? *queue*)) (define (enqueue x) (set! *queue* (append *queue* (list x)))) (define (dequeue) (let ((x (car *queue*))) (set! *queue* (cdr *queue*)) x)) ;;; This starts a new thread running (proc). (define (fork proc) (call/cc (lambda (k) (enqueue k) (proc)))) ;;; This yields the processor to another thread, if there is one. (define (yield) (call/cc (lambda (k) (enqueue k) ((dequeue))))) ;;; This terminates the current thread, or the entire program ;;; if there are no other threads left. (define (thread-exit) (if (empty-queue?) (exit) ((dequeue)))) The functions defined above allow for defining and executing threads through cooperative multitasking, i.e. threads that yield control to the next one in a queue: ;;; The body of some typical Scheme thread that does stuff: (define (do-stuff-n-print str) (lambda () (let loop ((n 0)) (format #t "~A ~A\n" str n) (yield) (loop (+ n 1))))) ;;; Create two threads, and start them running. (fork (do-stuff-n-print "This is AAA")) (fork (do-stuff-n-print "Hello from BBB")) (thread-exit) The previous code will produce this output: This is AAA 0 Hello from BBB 0 This is AAA 1 Hello from BBB 1 This is AAA 2 Hello from BBB 2 ...


Implementation

A program must allocate space in memory for the variables its functions use. Most programming languages use a
call stack In computer science, a call stack is a Stack (abstract data type), stack data structure that stores information about the active subroutines and block (programming), inline blocks of a computer program. This type of stack is also known as an exe ...
for storing the variables needed because it allows for fast and simple allocating and automatic deallocation of memory. Other programming languages use a heap for this, which allows for flexibility at a higher cost for allocating and deallocating memory. Both of these implementations have benefits and drawbacks in the context of continuations.


Programming language support

Many programming languages exhibit first-class continuations under various names; specifically: *
Common Lisp Common Lisp (CL) is a dialect of the Lisp programming language, published in American National Standards Institute (ANSI) standard document ''ANSI INCITS 226-1994 (S2018)'' (formerly ''X3.226-1994 (R1999)''). The Common Lisp HyperSpec, a hyperli ...

cl-cont
One can also use custom macros * C# / VB.NET: async and await: "sign up the rest of method as the continuation, and then return to your caller immediately; the task will invoke the continuation when it completes"
Asynchronous Programming for C#
* Factor: callcc0 and callcc1 *
Haskell Haskell () is a general-purpose, statically typed, purely functional programming language with type inference and lazy evaluation. Designed for teaching, research, and industrial applications, Haskell pioneered several programming language ...
: The Continuation monad in Control.Monad.Cont
/code> *
Haxe Haxe is a high-level cross-platform programming language and compiler that can produce applications and source code for many different computing platforms from one code-base. It is free and open-source software, released under an MIT License. ...

haxe-continuation
*
Icon An icon () is a religious work of art, most commonly a painting, in the cultures of the Eastern Orthodox, Oriental Orthodox, Catholic Church, Catholic, and Lutheranism, Lutheran churches. The most common subjects include Jesus, Mary, mother of ...
,
Unicon Unicon, previously known as UNICON, is the World unicycle, Unicycling Convention and Championships sanctioned by the International Unicycling Federation (IUF). The IUF sanctions a biennial world unicycling convention and competition, the major e ...
: create, suspend, @ operator: coexpressions *
Java Java is one of the Greater Sunda Islands in Indonesia. It is bordered by the Indian Ocean to the south and the Java Sea (a part of Pacific Ocean) to the north. With a population of 156.9 million people (including Madura) in mid 2024, proje ...

Lightwolfjavaflow
(requires bytecode manipulation at runtime or compile time) * Kotlin : Continuation * JavaScript Rhino : Continuation *
Parrot Parrots (Psittaciformes), also known as psittacines (), are birds with a strong curved beak, upright stance, and clawed feet. They are classified in four families that contain roughly 410 species in 101 genus (biology), genera, found mostly in ...
: Continuation PMC; uses continuation-passing style for all control flow *
Perl Perl is a high-level, general-purpose, interpreted, dynamic programming language. Though Perl is not officially an acronym, there are various backronyms in use, including "Practical Extraction and Reporting Language". Perl was developed ...

Coro
an
Continuity
* Pico: call(exp()) and continue(aContinuation, anyValue) * Python: PyPy's _continuation.continulets
/code> * Racket: call-with-current-continuation (commonly shortened to call/cc) *
Ruby Ruby is a pinkish-red-to-blood-red-colored gemstone, a variety of the mineral corundum ( aluminium oxide). Ruby is one of the most popular traditional jewelry gems and is very durable. Other varieties of gem-quality corundum are called sapph ...
: callcc * Scala: scala.util.continuations provides shift/reset * Scheme: call-with-current-continuation (commonly shortened to call/cc) *
Smalltalk Smalltalk is a purely object oriented programming language (OOP) that was originally created in the 1970s for educational use, specifically for constructionist learning, but later found use in business. It was created at Xerox PARC by Learni ...
: Continuation currentDo:; in most modern Smalltalk environments continuations can be implemented without additional VM support. * Standard ML of New Jersey: SMLofNJ.Cont.callcc * Unlambda: c, the flow control operation for call with current continuation In any language which supports closures and proper tail calls, it is possible to write programs in continuation-passing style and manually implement call/cc. (In continuation-passing style, call/cc becomes a simple function that can be written with
lambda Lambda (; uppercase , lowercase ; , ''lám(b)da'') is the eleventh letter of the Greek alphabet, representing the voiced alveolar lateral approximant . In the system of Greek numerals, lambda has a value of 30. Lambda is derived from the Phoen ...
.) This is a particularly common strategy in
Haskell Haskell () is a general-purpose, statically typed, purely functional programming language with type inference and lazy evaluation. Designed for teaching, research, and industrial applications, Haskell pioneered several programming language ...
, where it is easy to construct a "continuation-passing monad" (for example, the Cont monad and ContT monad transformer in the mtl library). The support for proper tail calls is needed because in continuation-passing style no function ever returns; ''all'' calls are tail calls.


In Web development

One area that has seen practical use of continuations is in Web programming. The use of continuations shields the programmer from the stateless nature of the
HTTP HTTP (Hypertext Transfer Protocol) is an application layer protocol in the Internet protocol suite model for distributed, collaborative, hypermedia information systems. HTTP is the foundation of data communication for the World Wide Web, wher ...
protocol. In the traditional model of web programming, the lack of state is reflected in the program's structure, leading to code constructed around a model that lends itself very poorly to expressing computational problems. Thus continuations enable code that has the useful properties associated with inversion of control, while avoiding its problems. "Inverting back the inversion of control or, Continuations versus page-centric programming"Christian.Queinne
(2003) Inverting back the inversion of control or, Continuations versus page-centric programming
/ref> is a paper that provides a good introduction to continuations applied to web programming.


Kinds

Support for continuations varies widely. A programming language supports ''re-invocable'' continuations if a continuation may be invoked repeatedly (even after it has already returned). Re-invocable continuations were introduced by Peter J. Landin using his J (for Jump) operator that could transfer the flow of control back into the middle of a procedure invocation. Re-invocable continuations have also been called "re-entrant" in the Racket language. However this use of the term "re-entrant" can be easily confused with its use in discussions of multithreading. A more limited kind is the ''escape continuation'' that may be used to escape the current context to a surrounding one. Many languages which do not explicitly support continuations support exception handling, which is equivalent to escape continuations and can be used for the same purposes. C's setjmp/longjmp are also equivalent: they can only be used to unwind the stack. Escape continuations can also be used to implement tail call elimination. One generalization of continuations are delimited continuations. Continuation operators like call/cc capture the ''entire'' remaining computation at a given point in the program and provide no way of delimiting this capture. Delimited continuation operators address this by providing two separate control mechanisms: a ''prompt'' that delimits a continuation operation and a ''reification'' operator such as shift or control. Continuations captured using delimited operators thus only represent a slice of the program context.


Disadvantages

Continuations are the functional expression of the GOTO statement, and the same caveats apply. While they are a sensible option in some special cases such as web programming, use of continuations can result in code that is difficult to follow. In fact, the esoteric programming language Unlambda includes call-with-current-continuation as one of its features solely because expressions involving it "tend to be hopelessly difficult to track down". The external links below illustrate the concept in more detail.


Linguistics

In "Continuations and the nature of quantification", Chris Barker introduced the "continuation hypothesis", that
some linguistic expressions (in particular, QNPs uantificational noun phrases have denotations that manipulate their own continuations.
Barker argued that this hypothesis could be used to explain phenomena such as ''duality of NP meaning'' (e.g., the fact that the QNP "everyone" behaves very differently from the non-quantificational noun phrase "Bob" in contributing towards the meaning of a sentence like "Alice sees ob/everyone), ''scope displacement'' (e.g., that "a raindrop fell on every car" is interpreted typically as \forall c \exists r, \mbox(r,c) rather than as \exists r \forall c, \mbox(r,c)), and ''scope ambiguity'' (that a sentence like "someone saw everyone" may be ambiguous between \exists x \forall y, \mbox(x,y) and \forall y \exists x, \mbox(x,y)). He also observed that this idea is in a way just a natural extension of Richard Montague's approach in "The Proper Treatment of Quantification in Ordinary English" (PTQ), writing that "with the benefit of hindsight, a limited form of continuation-passing is clearly discernible at the core of Montague’s (1973) PTQ treatment of NPs as generalized quantifiers". The extent to which continuations can be used to explain other general phenomena in natural language is a topic of current research.See for example Chris Barker,
Continuations in Natural Language
(Continuations Workshop 2004), or Chung-chieh Shan,
Linguistic Side Effects
(in "Direct compositionality,'' ed. Chris Barker and Pauline Jacobson, pp. 132-163, Oxford University Press, 2007).


See also

* Call-with-current-continuation * Closure * COMEFROM * Continuation-passing style * Control flow * Coroutine * Delimited continuation *
Denotational semantics In computer science, denotational semantics (initially known as mathematical semantics or Scott–Strachey semantics) is an approach of formalizing the meanings of programming languages by constructing mathematical objects (called ''denotations'' ...
* GOTO * Spaghetti stack * Quajects, a type of object which allows selectable continuations (called 'callouts') to be set for methods on a per-object basis, through Dependency Injection.


References


Further reading

* Peter Landin. ''A Generalization of Jumps and Labels'' Report. UNIVAC Systems Programming Research. August 1965. Reprinted in Higher Order and Symbolic Computation, 11(2):125-143, 1998, with a foreword by Hayo Thielecke. * Drew McDermott and Gerry Sussman. ''The Conniver Reference Manual'' MIT AI Memo 259. May 1972. * Daniel Bobrow: ''A Model for Control Structures for Artificial Intelligence Programming Languages'' IJCAI 1973. * Carl Hewitt, Peter Bishop and Richard Steiger. ''A Universal Modular Actor Formalism for Artificial Intelligence'' IJCAI 1973. * Christopher Strachey and Christopher P. Wadsworth. ''Continuations: a Mathematical semantics for handling full jumps'' Technical Monograph PRG-11. Oxford University Computing Laboratory. January 1974. Reprinted in Higher Order and Symbolic Computation, 13(1/2):135—152, 2000, with a foreword by Christopher P. Wadsworth. * John C. Reynolds. ''Definitional Interpreters for Higher-Order Programming Languages'' Proceedings of 25th ACM National Conference, pp. 717–740, 1972. Reprinted in Higher-Order and Symbolic Computation 11(4):363-397, 1998, with a foreword. *John C. Reynolds. ''On the Relation between Direct and Continuation Semantics'' Proceedings of Second Colloquium on Automata, Languages, and Programming. LNCS Vol. 14, pp. 141–156, 1974. * * Gerald Sussman and Guy Steele. ''SCHEME: An Interpreter for Extended Lambda Calculus'' AI Memo 349, MIT Artificial Intelligence Laboratory, Cambridge, Massachusetts, December 1975. Reprinted in Higher-Order and Symbolic Computation 11(4):405-439, 1998, with a foreword. * Robert Hieb, R. Kent Dybvig, Carl Bruggeman. ''Representing Control in the Presence of First-Class Continuations'' Proceedings of the ACM SIGPLAN '90 Conference on Programming Language Design and Implementation, pp. 66–77. * Will Clinger, Anne Hartheimer, Eric Ost. ''Implementation Strategies for Continuations'' Proceedings of the 1988 ACM conference on LISP and Functional Programming, pp. 124–131, 1988. Journal version: Higher-Order and Symbolic Computation, 12(1):7-45, 1999. * Christian Queinnec. ''Inverting back the inversion of control or, Continuations versus page-centric programming'' SIGPLAN Notices 38(2), pp. 57–64, 2003.


External links

* ACM
SIGPLAN SIGPLAN is the Association for Computing Machinery's Special Interest Group (SIG) on programming languages. This SIG explores programming language concepts and tools, focusing on design, implementation, practice, and theory. Its members are progra ...
br>Workshop on Continuations 2011
at the ICFP.
Continuations for Curmudgeons
by Sam Ruby

by Dorai Sitaram features a nice chapter on continuations.

by Christian Tismer

* ttps://web.archive.org/web/20060501194520/http://www.brics.dk/~cw97/ On-line proceedings of the Second ACM SIGPLAN Workshop on Continuationsbr>Continuation, functions and jumps

http://okmij.org/ftp/continuations/
by Oleg Kiselyov *https://wiki.haskell.org/Continuations
Rhino With ContinuationsContinuations in pure Java
from the RIFE web application framework
Debugging continuations in pure Java
from the RIFE web application framework

{{Formal semantics Control flow Articles with example Scheme (programming language) code