PRL Seminars![]() Intensional Polymorphism in Type-Erasure SemanticsStephanie Weirich
Abstract I will be presenting a paper I recently wrote with Karl Crary and Greg Morrisett. Copies of the paper may be found at http://www.cs.cornell.edu/home/sweirich/papers/typepass.html Intensional polymorphism, the ability to dispatch to different routines based on types at run time, enables a variety of advanced implementation techniques for polymorphic languages, including tag-free garbage collection, unboxed function arguments, polymorphic marshalling, and flattened data structures. To date, languages that support intensional polymorphism have required a type-passing (as opposed to type-erasure) interpretation where types are constructed and passed to polymorphic functions at run time. Unfortunately, type-passing suffers from a number of drawbacks; it requires duplication of constructs at the term and type levels, it prevents abstraction, and it severely complicates polymorphic closure conversion. We present a type-theoretic framework that supports intensional
polymorphism, but avoids many of the disadvantages of type passing. In our
approach, run-time type information is represented by ordinary terms. This
avoids the duplication problem, allows us to recover abstraction, and avoids
complications with closure conversion. In addition, our type system provides
another improvement in expressiveness; it allows unknown types to be refined
in place thereby avoiding certain beta-expansions required by other
frameworks.
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