CMU-CS-05-110 Computer Science Department School of Computer Science, Carnegie Mellon University
Practical Refinement-Type Checking Rowan Davies May 2005 Ph.D. Thesis
In this dissertation I describe an approach called refinement-type checking that allows many common program properties to be captured and checked. This approach builds on the strength of the type system of a language by adding the ability to specify refinements of each type. Following previous work, I focus on refinements that include subtyping and a form of intersection types. Central to my approach is the use of a bidirectional checking algorithm. This does not attempt to infer refinements for some expressions, such as functions, but only checks them against refinements. This avoids some difficulties encountered in previous work, and requires that the programmer annotate their program with some of the intended refinements. The required annotations appear to be very reasonable. Further, they document properties in a way that is natural, precise, easy to read, and reliable. I demonstrate the practicality of my approach by showing that it can be used to design a refinement-type checker for a widely-used language with a strong type system: Standard ML. This requires two main technical developments. Firstly, I present a new variant of intersection types that obtain soundness in the presence of call-by-value effects by incorporating a value restriction. Secondly, I present a practical approach to incorporating recursive refinements of ML datatypes, including a pragmatic method for checking the sequential pattern matching construct of ML. I conclude by reporting the results of experiments with my implementation of refinementtype checking for SML. These indicate that refinement-type checking is a practical method for capturing and checking properties of real code. 310 pages
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