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Quelle  Adaptation.thy

  Sprache: Isabelle
 

theory Adaptation
imports Setup
begin

setup %invisible Code_Target.add_derived_target ("🪙", [("SML", I)])
  #> Code_Target.add_derived_target ("🪙", [("Haskell", I)])

section Adaptation to target languages \label{sec:adaptation}

subsection Adapting code generation

text 
  The aspects of code generation introduced so far have two aspects
  in common:
 
  \begin{itemize}
 
  \item They act uniformly, without reference to a specific target
  language.
 
  \item They are \emph{safe} in the sense that as long as you trust
  the code generator meta theory and implementation, you cannot
  produce programs that yield results which are not derivable in
  the logic.
 
  \end{itemize}
 
  \noindent In this section we will introduce means to \emph{adapt}
  the serialiser to a specific target language, i.e.~to print program
  fragments in a way which accommodates \qt{already existing}
  ingredients of a target language environment, for three reasons:
 
  \begin{itemize}
  \item improving readability and aesthetics of generated code
  \item gaining efficiency
  \item interface with language parts which have no direct counterpart
  in HOL (say, imperative data structures)
  \end{itemize}
 
  \noindent Generally, you should avoid using those features yourself
  \emph{at any cost}:
 
  \begin{itemize}
 
  \item The safe configuration methods act uniformly on every target
  language, whereas for adaptation you have to treat each target
  language separately.
 
  \item Application is extremely tedious since there is no
  abstraction which would allow for a static check, making it easy
  to produce garbage.
 
  \item Subtle errors can be introduced unconsciously.
 
  \end{itemize}
 
  \noindent However, even if you ought refrain from setting up
  adaptation yourself, already HOL comes with some
  reasonable default adaptations (say, using target language list
  syntax). There also some common adaptation cases which you can
  setup by importing particular library theories. In order to
  understand these, we provide some clues here; these however are not
  supposed to replace a careful study of the sources.
 


subsection The adaptation principle

text 
  Figure \ref{fig:adaptation} illustrates what \qt{adaptation} is
  conceptually supposed to be:
 
  \begin{figure}[h]
  \begin{tikzpicture}[scale = 0.5]
  \tikzstyle water=[color = blue, thick]
  \tikzstyle ice=[color = black, very thick, cap = round, join = round, fill = white]
  \tikzstyle process=[color = green, semithick, ->]
  \tikzstyle adaptation=[color = red, semithick, ->]
  \tikzstyle target=[color = black]
  \foreach \x in {0, ..., 24}
  \draw[style=water] (\x, 0.25) sin + (0.25, 0.25) cos + (0.25, -0.25) sin
  + (0.25, -0.25) cos + (0.25, 0.25);
  \draw[style=ice] (1, 0) --
  (3, 6) node[above, fill=white] {logic} -- (5, 0) -- cycle;
  \draw[style=ice] (9, 0) --
  (11, 6) node[above, fill=white] {intermediate language} -- (13, 0) -- cycle;
  \draw[style=ice] (15, -6) --
  (19, 6) node[above, fill=white] {target language} -- (23, -6) -- cycle;
  \draw[style=process]
  (3.5, 3) .. controls (7, 5) .. node[fill=white] {translation} (10.5, 3);
  \draw[style=process]
  (11.5, 3) .. controls (15, 5) .. node[fill=white] (serialisation) {serialisation} (18.5, 3);
  \node (adaptation) at (11, -2) [style=adaptation] {adaptation};
  \node at (19, 3) [rotate=90] {generated};
  \node at (19.5, -5) {language};
  \node at (19.5, -3) {library};
  \node (includes) at (19.5, -1) {includes};
  \node (reserved) at (16.5, -3) [rotate=72] {reserved}; % proper 71.57
  \draw[style=process]
  (includes) -- (serialisation);
  \draw[style=process]
  (reserved) -- (serialisation);
  \draw[style=adaptation]
  (adaptation) -- (serialisation);
  \draw[style=adaptation]
  (adaptation) -- (includes);
  \draw[style=adaptation]
  (adaptation) -- (reserved);
  \end{tikzpicture}
  \caption{The adaptation principle}
  \label{fig:adaptation}
  \end{figure}
 
  \noindent In the tame view, code generation acts as broker between
  logic, intermediate language and target
  language
  structure of the language itself plus some reserved
  keywords which have to be avoided for generated code. However, if
  you consider adaptation mechanisms, the code generated by
  the serializer is just the tip of the iceberg:
 
  \begin{itemize}
 
  \item serialisation can be \emph{parametrised} such that
  logical entities are mapped to target-specific ones
  (e.g. target-specific list syntax, see also
  \secref{sec:adaptation_mechanisms})
 
  \item Such parametrisations can involve references to a
  target-specific standard library (e.g. using the Haskell 🍋Maybe type instead of the HOL
  🪙option type); if such are used, the corresponding
  identifiers (in our example, 🍋Maybe, 🍋Nothing and 🍋Just) also have to be considered reserved.
 
  \item Even more, the user can enrich the library of the
  target-language by providing code snippets (\qt{includes}) which are prepended to any generated code (see
  \secref{sec:include}); this typically also involves further
  reserved identifiers.
 
  \end{itemize}
 
  \noindent As figure \ref{fig:adaptation} illustrates, all these
  adaptation mechanisms have to act consistently; it is at the
  discretion of the user to take care for this.
 

subsection Common adaptation applications \label{sec:common_adaptation}

text 
  The 🍋Main theory of Isabelle/HOL already provides a code
  generator setup which should be suitable for most applications.
  Common extensions and modifications are available by certain
  theories in 🍋~~/src/HOL/Library; beside being useful in
  applications, they may serve as a tutorial for customising the code
  generator setup (see below \secref{sec:adaptation_mechanisms}).
 
  \begin{description}
 
  \item[🍋HOL.Code_Numeral] provides additional numeric
  types 🍋integer and 🍋natural isomorphic to types
  🍋int and 🍋nat respectively. Type 🍋integer
  is mapped to target-language built-in integers; 🍋natural
  is implemented as abstract type over 🍋integer.
  Useful for code setups which involve e.g.~indexing
  of target-language arrays. Part of HOL-Main.
 
  \item[🍋HOL.String] provides an additional datatype 🍋String.literal which is isomorphic to lists of 7-bit (ASCII) characters;
  🍋String.literals are mapped to target-language strings.
 
  Literal values of type 🍋String.literal can be written
  as STR '''' for sequences of printable characters and
  STR 0x for one single ASCII code point given
  as hexadecimal numeral; 🍋String.literal supports concatenation
  + for all standard target languages.
 
  Note that the particular notion of \qt{string} is target-language
  specific (sequence of 8-bit units, sequence of unicode code points, \ldots);
  hence ASCII is the only reliable common base e.g.~for
  printing (error) messages; more sophisticated applications
  like verifying parsing algorithms require a dedicated
  target-language specific model.
 
  Nevertheless 🍋String.literals can be analyzed; the core operations
  for this are 🪙String.asciis_of_literal and
  🪙String.literal_of_asciis which are implemented
  in a target-language-specific way; particularly 🍋String.asciis_of_literal
  checks its argument at runtime to make sure that it does
  not contain non-ASCII-characters, to safeguard consistency.
  On top of these, more abstract conversions like 🪙String.explode and 🪙String.implode
  are implemented.
 
  Part of HOL-Main.
 
  \item[🍋HOL-Library.IArray] provides a type 🍋'a iarray
  isomorphic to lists but implemented by (effectively immutable)
  arrays \emph{in SML only}.
 
  \end{description}
 
  \noindent Using these adaptation setups the following extensions are provided:
 
  \begin{description}
 
  \item[Code_Target_Int] implements type 🍋int
  by 🍋integer and thus by target-language built-in integers.
 
  \item[Code_Binary_Nat] implements type
  🍋nat using a binary rather than a linear representation,
  which yields a considerable speedup for computations.
  Pattern matching with 🍋0::nat / 🍋Suc is eliminated
  by a preprocessor.\label{abstract_nat}
 
  \item[Code_Target_Nat] implements type 🍋nat
  by 🍋integer and thus by target-language built-in integers.
  Pattern matching with 🍋0::nat / 🍋Suc is eliminated
  by a preprocessor.
 
  \item[Code_Target_Numeral] is a convenience theory
  containing Code_Target_Nat, Code_Target_Int and Code_Target_Bit_Shifts-
 
  \item[Code_Bit_Shifts_for_Arithmetic] uses the preprocessor to
  replace arithmetic operations on numeric types by target-language
  built-in bit shifts whenever feasible.
 
  \item[Code_Abstract_Char] implements type 🍋char by target language
  integers, sacrificing pattern patching in exchange for dramatically
  increased performance for comparisons.
 
  \end{description}
 


subsection Parametrising serialisation \label{sec:adaptation_mechanisms}

text 
  Consider the following function and its corresponding SML code:
 

primrec %quote in_interval :: "nat × nat ==> nat ==> bool" where
  "in_interval (k, l) n k n n l"
(*<*)
code_printing %invisible
  type_constructor bool  (SML)
| constant True  (SML)
| constant False  (SML)
| constant HOL.conj  (SML)
| constant Not  (SML)
(*>*)
text %quote 
  @{code_stmts in_interval (SML)}
 

text 
  \noindent Though this is correct code, it is a little bit
  unsatisfactory: boolean values and operators are materialised as
  distinguished entities with have nothing to do with the SML-built-in
  notion of \qt{bool}. This results in less readable code;
  additionally, eager evaluation may cause programs to loop or break
  which would perfectly terminate when the existing SML 🍋bool w


code_printing %quotett
  type_constructor bool  (SML) "bool"
| constant True  (SML) "true"
| constant False  (SML) "false"
| constant HOL.conj  (SML) "_ andalso _"

text 
  \noindent The @{command_def code_printing} command takes a series
  of symbols (contants, type constructor, \ldots)
  together with target-specific custom serialisations. Each
  custom serialisation starts with a target language identifier
  followed by an expression, which during code serialisation is
  inserted whenever the type constructor would occur. Each
  ``🍋_''
  placeholder for the constant's or the type constructor's arguments.


text %quote 
  @{code_stmts in_interval (SML)}
 

text 
  \noindent This still is not perfect: the parentheses around the
  \qt{andalso} expression are superfluous. Though the serialiser by
  no means attempts to imitate the rich Isabelle syntax framework, it
  provides some common idioms, notably associative infixes with
  precedences which may be used here:
 

code_printing %quotett
  constant HOL.conj  (SML) infixl 1 "andalso"

text %quote 
  @{code_stmts in_interval (SML)}
 

text 
  \noindent The attentive reader may ask how we assert that no
  generated code will accidentally overwrite. For this reason the
  serialiser has an internal table of identifiers which have to be
  avoided to be used for new declarations. Initially, this table
  typically contains the keywords of the target language. It can be
  extended manually, thus avoiding accidental overwrites, using the
  @{command_def "code_reserved"} command:
 

code_reserved %quotett ("🪙") bool true false andalso

text 
  \noindent Next, we try to map HOL pairs to SML pairs, using the
  infix ``🍋*''

(*<*)
code_printing %invisible
  type_constructor prod  (SML)
| constant Pair  (SML)
(*>*)
code_printing %quotett
  type_constructor prod  (SML) infix 2 "*"
| constant Pair  (SML) "!((_),/ (_))"

text 
  \noindent The initial bang ``🍋!''
  never to put parentheses around the whole expression (they are
  already present), while the parentheses around argument place
  holders tell not to put parentheses around the arguments.  The slash
  ``🍋/'' (followed by arbitrary white space) inserts a
  space which may be used as a break if necessary during pretty
  printing.

  These examples give a glimpse what mechanisms custom serialisations
  provide; however their usage requires careful thinking in order not
  to introduce inconsistencies -- or, in other words: custom
  serialisations are completely axiomatic.

  A further noteworthy detail is that any special character in a
  custom serialisation may be quoted using ``🍋'''; thus,
  in ``🍋fn '_ => _'' the first ``🍋_'' is a
  proper underscore while the second ``🍋_'' is a
  placeholder.



subsection Haskell serialisation

text 
  For convenience, the default HOL s
  maps the 🍋equal class to its counterpart in Haskell,
  giving custom serialisations for the class 🍋equal
  and its operation @{const [source] HOL.equal}.


code_printing %quotett
  type_class equal  (Haskell) "Eq"
| constant HOL.equal  (Haskell) infixl 4 "=="

text 
  \noindent A problem now occurs whenever a type which is an instance
  of 🍋equal i
  Eq:


typedecl %quote bar

instantiation %quote bar :: equal
begin

definition %quote "HOL.equal (x::bar) y x = y"

instance %quote by standard (simp add: equal_bar_def)

end %quote (*<*)

(*>*) code_printing %quotett
  type_constructor bar  (Haskell) "Integer"

text 
  \noindent The code generator would produce an additional instance,
  which of course is rejected by the Haskell c
  suppress this additional instance:


code_printing %quotett
  class_instance bar :: "HOL.equal"  (Haskell) -


subsection Enhancing the target language context \label{sec:include}

text 
  In rare cases it is necessary to \emph{enrich} the context of a
  target language; this can also be accomplished using the @{command
  "code_printing"} command:
 

code_printing %quotett code_module "Errno"  (Haskell)
 module Errno(errno) where
 
  errno i = error ("Error number: " ++ show i)

code_reserved %quotett (Haskell) Errno

text 
  \noindent Such named modules are then prepended to every
  generated code. Inspect such code in order to find out how
  this behaves with respect to a particular
  target language.
 

end

Messung V0.5 in Prozent
C=8 H=-55 G=38

¤ Dauer der Verarbeitung: 0.15 Sekunden  (vorverarbeitet am  2026-05-01) ¤

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