Imperative Programming with Dependent Types Hongwei Xi University of Cincinnati.

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Transcript of Imperative Programming with Dependent Types Hongwei Xi University of Cincinnati.

Imperative Programming with Dependent Types

Hongwei XiUniversity of Cincinnati

A Wish List

We would like to have a programming language that should– be simple and general– support extensive error checking– facilitate proofs of program properties– possess correct and efficient implementation– ... ...

Reality

Invariably, there are many conflicts among this wish list

These conflicts must be resolved with careful attention to the needs of the user

Advantages of Types

Capturing errors at compile-time Enabling compiler optimizations Facilitating program verification Serving as program documentation

Limitations of (Simple) Types

Not general enough– Many correct programs cannot be typed

Not specific enough– Many interesting properties cannot be

captured

Dependent Types

Dependent types are types that are– more refined– dependent on the values of expressions

Examples– int(i): singleton type containing only integer i– <int> array(n): type for integer arrays of size

n

Type System Design

A practically useful type system should be– Scalable– Applicable– Comprehensible– Unobtrusive– Flexible

Xanadu

Xanadu is a dependently typed imperative programming language with C-like syntax

The type of a variable in Xanadu can change during execution

The programmer may need to provide dependent type annotations for type-checking purpose

Early Design Decisions

Practical type-checking Realistic programming features Conservative extension Pay-only-if-you-use policy

Examples of Dependent Types in Xanadu

int(a): singleton types containing the only integer equal to a, where a ranges over all integers

<‘a> array(a): types for arrays of size a in which all elements are of type ‘a, where a ranges over all natural numbers

Examples of Dependent Types in Xanadu

int(i,j) is defined as [a:int | i < a < j] int(a),that is, the sum of all types int(a) for i < a < j

int[i,j), int(i,j] , int[i,j] are defined similarly

A Xanadu Program

{n:nat}unit init (int vec[n]) { var int ind, size;; size = arraysize(vec); invariant: [i:nat] (ind: int(i)) for (ind=0; ind<size; ind=ind+1){ vec[ind] = ind; }}

A Slight Variation

{n:nat}

unit init (int vec[n]) {

var nat ind, size;;

size = arraysize(vec);

for (ind=0; ind<size; ind=ind+1){

vec[ind] = ind;

}

}

Dependent Record Types

A polymorphic type for arrays

{n:nat} <‘a> array(n) { size: int(n); data[n]: ‘a}

Binary Search in Xanadu

{n:nat}int bs(key: int, vec: <int> array(n)) { var: l: int [0, n], h: int [-1, n); m: int; x: float;; l = 0; h = vec.size - 1; while (l <= h) { m = (l + h) / 2; x = vec.data[m]; if (x < key) { l = m - 1; } else if (x > key) { h = m + 1; } else { return m; } } return –1;}

Dependent Record Types

A polymorphic type for 2-dimensional arrays:

{n:nat} <‘a> array2(m,n) { row: int(m); col: int(n); data[m][n]: ‘a}

Dependent Record Types

A polymorphic type for sparse arrays:

<‘a>sparseArray(m,n) { row: int(m); col: int(n); data[m]: <int[0,n) * ‘a> list}

Dependent Union Types

A polymorphic type for lists:

union <‘a> list with nat = { Nil(0); {n:nat} Cons(n+1) of ‘a <‘a> list(n) }

Nil: <‘a> list(0) Cons: {n:nat} ‘a * <‘a> list(n) -> ‘a

list(n+1)

Dependent Union Types

A polymorphic type for binary trees:

union <‘a> tree with (nat,nat) = { E(0,0); {sl:nat,sr:nat,hl:nat,hr:nat} B(sl+sr+1,1+max(hl,hr)) of <‘a> tree(sl,hl) ‘a <‘a> tree(sr,hr) }

Typing Judgment in Xanadu

e

Typing Assignment

exexunit

Typing Loop

ebooliieunitwhileeeiunit

Reverse Append in Xanadu

(‘a) {m:nat,n:nat}

<‘a> list(m+n) revApp (xs:<‘a> list(m),ys:<‘a> list(n)) {var: ‘a x;;invariant: [m1:nat,n1:nat | m1+n1=m+n] (xs:<‘a> list(m1), ys:<‘a> list(n1))while (true) { switch (xs) { case Nil: return ys; case Cons (x, xs): ys = Cons(x, ys); } } exit; /* can never be reached */

}

Constraint Generation in Type-checking

The following integer constraint is generated when the revApp example is type-checked:

m:nat,n:nat, m1:nat,n1:nat, m1+n1=m+n, a:nat, m1=a+1

|= a+(n1+1)=m+n

Conclusion

It is still largely an elusive goal in practice to verify the correctness of a program

It is therefore important to identify those program properties that can be effectively verified for realistic programs

Conclusion

We have designed a type-theoretic approach to capturing simple arithmetic reasoning

The preliminary studies indicate that this approach allows the programmer to capture many more properties in realistic programs

Future Work

Adding more program features into Xanadu

Constructing a compiler for Xanadu that can compile dependent types from source level into bytecode level

Incorporating dependent types into Java and …