17 min

Gradual Typing with Union and Intersection Types International Conference on Functional Programming 2017

    • Éducation

Victor Lanvin (ENS Cachan, France) gives the third talk in the fourth panel, Integrating Static and Dynamic Typing, on the 3rd day of the ICFP conference. Co-written by Giuseppe Castagna (CNRS, University of Paris Diderot).

We propose a type system for functional languages with gradual types and set-theoretic type connectives and prove its soundness. In particular, we show how to lift the definition of the domain and result type of an application from non-gradual types to gradual ones and likewise for the subtyping relation. We also show that deciding subtyping for gradual types can be reduced in linear time to deciding subtyping on non-gradual types and that the same holds true for all subtyping-related decision problems that must be solved for type inference. More generally, this work not only enriches gradual type systems with unions and intersections and with the type precision that arise from their use, but also proposes and advocates a new style of gradual types programming where union and intersection types are used by programmers to instruct the system to perform fewer dynamic checks. Creative Commons Attribution-Non-Commercial-Share Alike 2.0 UK: England & Wales; http://creativecommons.org/licenses/by-nc-sa/2.0/uk/

Victor Lanvin (ENS Cachan, France) gives the third talk in the fourth panel, Integrating Static and Dynamic Typing, on the 3rd day of the ICFP conference. Co-written by Giuseppe Castagna (CNRS, University of Paris Diderot).

We propose a type system for functional languages with gradual types and set-theoretic type connectives and prove its soundness. In particular, we show how to lift the definition of the domain and result type of an application from non-gradual types to gradual ones and likewise for the subtyping relation. We also show that deciding subtyping for gradual types can be reduced in linear time to deciding subtyping on non-gradual types and that the same holds true for all subtyping-related decision problems that must be solved for type inference. More generally, this work not only enriches gradual type systems with unions and intersections and with the type precision that arise from their use, but also proposes and advocates a new style of gradual types programming where union and intersection types are used by programmers to instruct the system to perform fewer dynamic checks. Creative Commons Attribution-Non-Commercial-Share Alike 2.0 UK: England & Wales; http://creativecommons.org/licenses/by-nc-sa/2.0/uk/

17 min

Classement des podcasts dans Éducation

Ma parole
France Culture
"Comment tu fais ?" by Laury Thilleman
Laury Thilleman
Chaud Dedans
Claire Fournier
Ces questions que tout le monde se pose
Maud Ankaoua
Choses à Savoir
Choses à Savoir
Change ma vie : Outils pour l'esprit
Clotilde Dusoulier

Plus par Oxford University

Public International Law Part III
Oxford University
Pharmaceutical Industry: Past, Present and Future
Oxford University
Public International Law Discussion Group (Part I) and Annual Global Justice Lectures
Oxford University
Fantasy Literature
Oxford University
Literature, Art and Oxford
Oxford University
Approaching Shakespeare
Oxford University