2,553 research outputs found
A Practical Type Analysis for Verification of Modular Prolog Programs
Regular types are a powerful tool for computing very precise descriptive types for logic programs. However, in the context of real life, modular Prolog programs, the accurate results obtained by regular types often come at the price of efficiency. In this paper we propose a combination of techniques aimed at improving analysis efficiency in this context. As a first technique we allow optionally reducing the accuracy of inferred types by using only the types defined by the user or present in the libraries. We claim that, for the purpose of verifying type signatures given in the form of assertions the precision obtained using this approach is sufficient, and show that analysis times can be reduced significantly. Our second technique is aimed at dealing with situations where we would like to limit the amount of reanalysis performed, especially for library modules. Borrowing some ideas from polymorphic type systems, we show how to solve the problem by admitting parameters in type specifications. This allows us to compose new call patterns with some pre computed analysis info without losing any information. We argue that together these two techniques contribute to the practical and scalable analysis and verification of types in Prolog programs
Towards Parameterized Regular Type Inference Using Set Constraints
We propose a method for inferring \emph{parameterized regular types} for
logic programs as solutions for systems of constraints over sets of finite
ground Herbrand terms (set constraint systems). Such parameterized regular
types generalize \emph{parametric} regular types by extending the scope of the
parameters in the type definitions so that such parameters can relate the types
of different predicates. We propose a number of enhancements to the procedure
for solving the constraint systems that improve the precision of the type
descriptions inferred. The resulting algorithm, together with a procedure to
establish a set constraint system from a logic program, yields a program
analysis that infers tighter safe approximations of the success types of the
program than previous comparable work, offering a new and useful efficiency vs.
precision trade-off. This is supported by experimental results, which show the
feasibility of our analysis
Type Classes for Lightweight Substructural Types
Linear and substructural types are powerful tools, but adding them to
standard functional programming languages often means introducing extra
annotations and typing machinery. We propose a lightweight substructural type
system design that recasts the structural rules of weakening and contraction as
type classes; we demonstrate this design in a prototype language, Clamp.
Clamp supports polymorphic substructural types as well as an expressive
system of mutable references. At the same time, it adds little additional
overhead to a standard Damas-Hindley-Milner type system enriched with type
classes. We have established type safety for the core model and implemented a
type checker with type inference in Haskell.Comment: In Proceedings LINEARITY 2014, arXiv:1502.0441
No value restriction is needed for algebraic effects and handlers
We present a straightforward, sound Hindley-Milner polymorphic type system
for algebraic effects and handlers in a call-by-value calculus, which allows
type variable generalisation of arbitrary computations, not just values. This
result is surprising. On the one hand, the soundness of unrestricted
call-by-value Hindley-Milner polymorphism is known to fail in the presence of
computational effects such as reference cells and continuations. On the other
hand, many programming examples can be recast to use effect handlers instead of
these effects. Analysing the expressive power of effect handlers with respect
to state effects, we claim handlers cannot express reference cells, and show
they can simulate dynamically scoped state
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