Visible to the public Safely Composable Type-Specific Languages.

TitleSafely Composable Type-Specific Languages.
Publication TypeConference Proceedings
Year of Publication2014
AuthorsOmar, Cyrus, Kurilova, Darya, Nistor, Ligia, Chung, Benjamin, Potanin, Alex, Aldrich, Jonathan
Conference NameEuropean Conference on Object-Oriented Programming (ECOOP), 2014
Abstract

Programming languages often include specialized syntax for common
datatypes (e.g. lists) and some also build in support for specific specialized
datatypes (e.g. regular expressions), but user-defined types must use generalpurpose
syntax. Frustration with this causes developers to use strings, rather than
structured data, with alarming frequency, leading to correctness, performance,
security, and usability issues. Allowing library providers to modularly extend a
language with new syntax could help address these issues. Unfortunately, prior
mechanisms either limit expressiveness or are not safely composable: individually
unambiguous extensions can still cause ambiguities when used together.
We introduce type-specific languages (TSLs): logic associated with a type that
determines how the bodies of generic literals, able to contain arbitrary syntax,
are parsed and elaborated, hygienically. The TSL for a type is invoked only
when a literal appears where a term of that type is expected, guaranteeing noninterference.
We give evidence supporting the applicability of this approach and
formally specify it with a bidirectionally typed elaboration semantics for the
Wyvern programming language.

Citation Keynode-17130