---------------------------------------------------------------------- -- | -- Module : Unbound.LocallyNameless -- License : BSD-like (see LICENSE) -- Maintainer : Brent Yorgey <byorgey@cis.upenn.edu> -- Stability : experimental -- Portability : GHC only (-XKitchenSink) -- -- A generic implementation of standard functions dealing with names -- and binding structure (alpha equivalence, free variable -- calculation, capture-avoiding substitution, name permutation, ...) -- using a locally nameless representation. -- -- Normal users of this library should only need to import this -- module. In particular, this module is careful to export only an -- abstract interface with various safety guarantees. Power users who -- wish to have access to the internals of the library (at the risk of -- shooting oneself in the foot) can directly import the various -- implementation modules such as "Unbound.LocallyNameless.Name" and -- so on. -- -- /Ten-second tutorial/: use the type combinators 'Bind', 'Embed', -- 'Rebind', 'Rec', 'TRec', and 'Shift' to specify the binding -- structure of your data types. Then use Template Haskell to derive -- generic representations for your types: -- -- > $(derive [''Your, ''Types, ''Here]) -- -- Finally, declare 'Alpha' and 'Subst' instances for your types. -- Then you can go to town using all the generically-derived -- operations like 'aeq', 'fv', 'subst', and so on. -- -- For more information, see the more in-depth literate Haskell -- tutorial in the @tutorial@ directory (which can be obtained as part -- of the library source package: @cabal unpack unbound@) and the -- examples in the @example@ directory. -- -- See also: Stephanie Weirich, Brent A. Yorgey, and Tim Sheard. -- /Binders Unbound/. ICFP'11, September 2011, Tokyo, Japan. <http://www.cis.upenn.edu/~byorgey/papers/binders-unbound.pdf>. ---------------------------------------------------------------------- module Unbound.LocallyNameless ( -- * Names Name, AnyName(..), -- ** Constructing and destructing free names integer2Name, string2Name, s2n, makeName, name2Integer, name2String, anyName2Integer, anyName2String, -- ** Dealing with name sorts translate, toSortedName, -- * Type combinators for specifying binding structure -- -- | 'Bind', 'Embed', 'Rebind', 'Rec', 'TRec', and 'Shift' are -- special types provided by Unbound for use in specifying the -- binding structure of your data types. -- -- An important distinction to keep in mind is the difference -- between /term types/ and /pattern types/. -- -- * /Term types/ are normal types whose values represent data in -- your program. Any 'Name's occurring in term types are -- either free variables, or /references/ to binders. -- -- * /Pattern types/ are types which may be used on the left -- hand side of a 'Bind'. They /bind/ names, that is, any -- 'Name's occurring in pattern types are /binding sites/ to -- which other names may refer. -- -- 'Name' may be used as both a term type (where it represents a -- free variable/reference) and a pattern type (where it -- represents a binding site). -- -- Any first-order algebraic data type (/i.e./ one containing no -- functions) which contains only term types may be used as a -- term type, and likewise for algebraic data types containing -- only pattern types. For example, -- -- > (Name, [Name]) -- -- may be used as either a term type or a pattern type. On the -- other hand, -- -- > (Bind Name Name, Name) -- -- may only be used as a term type, since @Bind Name Name@ is a -- term type and not a pattern type. -- -- We adopt the convention that the type variable @t@ stands for -- term types, and the type variable @p@ stands for pattern -- types. It would be nicer if we could actually use Haskell's -- type system to enforce the distinction, but for various -- technical reasons (involving the RepLib generic programming -- framework which is used in the implementation), we cannot. -- Or at least, we are not sufficiently clever to see how. -- ** Bind Bind, -- *** Bind constructors bind, permbind, setbind, setbindAny, -- *** Bind destructors -- | Directly pattern-matching on 'Bind' values is not allowed, -- but there are quite a few different ways to safely \"open\" a -- binding. (If you want direct, unsafe access to the -- components of a binding --- e.g. to write a function to -- compute the size of terms that ignores all names --- you can -- directly import "Unbound.LocallyNameless.Ops" and use the -- 'unsafeUnbind' function.) unbind, lunbind, -- *** Simultaneous unbinding -- | Sometimes one may wish to open several bindings using /same/ -- names for their binding variables --- for example, when -- checking equality of terms involving binders, so that the -- free variables in the bodies will match appropriately during -- recursive calls. Opening two bindings simultaneously is -- accomplished with 'unbind2' (which picks globally fresh -- names) and 'lunbind2' (which picks /locally/ fresh names, see -- the 'LFresh' documentation for more information). 'unbind3' -- and 'lunbind3' open three bindings simultaneously. In -- principle, of course, @unbindN@ and @lunbindN@ can be easily -- implemented for any @N@; please let the maintainers know if -- for some reason you would like an N > 3. unbind2, unbind3, lunbind2, lunbind3, unbind2Plus, unbind3Plus, lunbind2Plus, lunbind3Plus, -- ** Embed Embed(..), embed, unembed, -- ** Rebind Rebind, rebind, unrebind, -- ** Rec Rec, rec, unrec, -- ** TRec TRec, trec, untrec, luntrec, -- ** Shift Shift(..), -- * Generically derived operations -- | This section lists a number of operations which are derived -- generically for any types whose binding structure is -- specified via the type combinators described in the previous -- section. -- ** Alpha-equivalence aeq, aeqBinders, acompare, -- ** Variable calculations -- | Functions for computing the free variables or binding -- variables of a term or pattern. Note that all these -- functions may return an arbitrary /collection/, which -- includes lists, sets, and multisets. fv, fvAny, patfv, patfvAny, binders, bindersAny, -- *** Collections Collection(..), Multiset(..), -- ** Substitution -- | Capture-avoiding substitution. Subst(..), SubstName(..), -- ** Permutations Perm, -- *** Working with permutations single, compose, apply, support, isid, join, empty, restrict, mkPerm, -- *** Permuting terms swaps, swapsEmbeds, swapsBinders, -- * Freshness -- | When opening a term-level binding ('Bind' or 'TRec'), fresh -- names must be generated for the binders of its pattern. -- Fresh names can be generated according to one of two -- strategies: names can be /globally/ fresh (not conflicting -- with any other generated names, ever; see 'Fresh') or -- /locally/ fresh (not conflicting only with a specific set of -- \"currently in-scope\" names; see 'LFresh'). Generating -- globally fresh names is simpler and suffices for many -- applications. Generating locally fresh names tends to be -- useful when the names are for human consumption, e.g. when -- implementing a pretty-printer. -- ** Global freshness freshen, -- *** The @Fresh@ class Fresh(..), -- *** The @FreshM@ monad -- | The @FreshM@ monad provides a concrete implementation of the -- 'Fresh' type class. The @FreshMT@ monad transformer variant -- can be freely combined with other standard monads and monad -- transformers from the @transformers@ library. FreshM, runFreshM, FreshMT, runFreshMT, -- ** Local freshness lfreshen, -- *** The @LFresh@ class LFresh(..), -- *** The @LFreshM@ monad -- | The @LFreshM@ monad provides a concrete implementation of the -- 'LFresh' type class. The @LFreshMT@ monad transformer variant -- can be freely combined with other standard monads and monad -- transformers from the @transformers@ library. LFreshM, runLFreshM, LFreshMT, runLFreshMT, -- * The @Alpha@ class Alpha(..), -- * Re-exported RepLib API for convenience module Generics.RepLib, -- * Pay no attention to the man behind the curtain -- | These type representation objects are exported so they can be -- referenced by auto-generated code. Please pretend they do not -- exist. rName, rGenBind, rRebind, rEmbed, rRec, rShift ) where import Unbound.LocallyNameless.Name import Unbound.LocallyNameless.Fresh import Unbound.LocallyNameless.Types import Unbound.LocallyNameless.Alpha import Unbound.LocallyNameless.Subst import Unbound.LocallyNameless.Ops import Unbound.Util import Unbound.PermM import Generics.RepLib