No Unification Variable Left Behind: Fully Grounding Type Inference for the HDM System

Authors Roger Bosman , Georgios Karachalias, Tom Schrijvers



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Roger Bosman
  • KU Leuven, Belgium
Georgios Karachalias
  • Tweag, Paris, France
Tom Schrijvers
  • KU Leuven, Belgium

Acknowledgements

We would like to thank Steven Keuchel for their help and insights about Coq, and their comments about a draft of this paper.

Cite AsGet BibTex

Roger Bosman, Georgios Karachalias, and Tom Schrijvers. No Unification Variable Left Behind: Fully Grounding Type Inference for the HDM System. In 14th International Conference on Interactive Theorem Proving (ITP 2023). Leibniz International Proceedings in Informatics (LIPIcs), Volume 268, pp. 8:1-8:18, Schloss Dagstuhl – Leibniz-Zentrum für Informatik (2023)
https://doi.org/10.4230/LIPIcs.ITP.2023.8

Abstract

The Hindley-Damas-Milner (HDM) system provides polymorphism, a key feature of functional programming languages such as Haskell and OCaml. It does so through a type inference algorithm, whose soundness and completeness have been well-studied and proven both manually (on paper) and mechanically (in a proof assistant). Earlier research has focused on the problem of inferring the type of a top-level expression. Yet, in practice, we also may wish to infer the type of subexpressions, either for the sake of elaboration into an explicitly-typed target language, or for reporting those types back to the programmer. One key difference between these two problems is the treatment of underconstrained types: in the former, unification variables that do not affect the overall type need not be instantiated. However, in the latter, instantiating all unification variables is essential, because unification variables are internal to the algorithm and should not leak into the output. We present an algorithm for the HDM system that explicitly tracks the scope of all unification variables. In addition to solving the subexpression type reconstruction problem described above, it can be used as a basis for elaboration algorithms, including those that implement elaboration-based features such as type classes. The algorithm implements input and output contexts, as well as the novel concept of full contexts, which significantly simplifies the state-passing of traditional algorithms. The algorithm has been formalised and proven sound and complete using the Coq proof assistant.

Subject Classification

ACM Subject Classification
  • Software and its engineering → Formal software verification
  • Software and its engineering → Correctness
Keywords
  • type inference
  • mechanization
  • let-polymorphism

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