7 research outputs found

    Coalgebren und Funktoren

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    Coalgebren und Funktoren

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    Coalgebraic modelling of timed processes

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    Distributive laws in programming structures

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    Distributive laws in Computer Science are rules governing the transformation of one programming structure into another. In programming, they are programs satisfying certain formal conditions. Their importance has been to date documented in several isolated cases by diverse formal approaches. These applications have always meant leaps in understanding the nature of the subject. However, distributive laws have not yet been given the attention they deserve. One of the reasons for this omission is certainly the lack of a formal notion of distributive laws in their full generality. This hinders the discovery and formal description of occurrences of distributive laws, which is the precursor of any formal manipulation. In this thesis, an approach to formalisation of distributive laws is presented based on the functorial approach to formal Category Theory pioneered by Lawvere and others, notably Gray. The proposed formalism discloses a rather simple nature of distributive laws of the kind found in programming structures based on lax 2-naturality and Gray's tensor product of 2-categories. It generalises the existing more specific notions of distributive laws. General notions of products, coproducts and composition of distributive laws are studied and conditions for their construction given. Finally, the proposed formalism is put to work in establishing a semantical equivalence between a large class of functional and object-based programs

    Distributivity for a monad and a comonad

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    AbstractWe give a systematic treatment of distributivity for a monad and a comonad as arises in incorporating category theoretic accounts of operational and denotational semantics, and in giving an intensional denotational semantics. We do this axiomatically, in terms of a monad and a comonad in a 2-category, giving accounts of the Eilenberg-Moore and Kleisli constructions. We analyse the eight possible relationships, deducing that two pairs are isomorphic, but that the other pairs are all distinct. We develop those 2-categorical definitions necessary to support this analysis
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