"Classes have an intrinsic partial order; given two classes A and B, we either have that A is a subset of B, B is a subset of A, A and B are equal as sets, or they are incomparable. The last two situations present difficulties for method dispatch:"
"If a generic word defines a method on a mixin class A and another on class B, and B is the only instance of A, there is an ambiguity because A and B are equal as sets; any object that is an instance of one is an instance of both."
{ "If a generic word defines methods on two union classes which are incomparable but not disjoint, for example " { $link sequence } " and " { $link number } ", there is an ambiguity because the generic word may be called on an object that is an instance of both unions." }
"This means that in the above example, the generic word with methods on a mixin and its sole instance will always call the method for the sole instance, since it is more specific than a mixin class."
$nl
"The second problem is resolved with another tie-breaker. When performing the topological sort of classes, if there are multiple candidates at any given step of the sort, lexicographical order on the class name is used."
{ $description "Tests if two classes have a non-empty intersection. If the intersection is empty, no object can be an instance of both classes at once." } ;