Practical,pluggable types for a dynamic language |
| |
Authors: | Niklaus Haldiman Marcus Denker Oscar Nierstrasz |
| |
Affiliation: | Software Composition Group, IAM, Universität Bern, Switzerland |
| |
Abstract: | Most languages fall into one of two camps: either they adopt a unique, static type system, or they abandon static type-checks for run-time checks. Pluggable types blur this division by (i) making static type systems optional, and (ii) supporting a choice of type systems for reasoning about different kinds of static properties. Dynamic languages can then benefit from static-checking without sacrificing dynamic features or committing to a unique, static type system. But the overhead of adopting pluggable types can be very high, especially if all existing code must be decorated with type annotations before any type-checking can be performed. We propose a practical and pragmatic approach to introduce pluggable type systems to dynamic languages. First of all, only annotated code is type-checked. Second, limited type inference is performed on unannotated code to reduce the number of reported errors. Finally, external annotations can be used to type third-party code. We present TypePlug, a Smalltalk implementation of our framework, and report on experience applying the framework to three different pluggable type systems. |
| |
Keywords: | |
本文献已被 ScienceDirect 等数据库收录! |
|