Interactive Editing

By now, we have seen several examples of how Idris’ dependent type system can give extra confidence in a function’s correctness by giving a more precise description of its intended behaviour in its type. We have also seen an example of how the type system can help with EDSL development by allowing a programmer to describe the type system of an object language. However, precise types give us more than verification of programs — we can also exploit types to help write programs which are correct by construction.

The Idris REPL provides several commands for inspecting and modifying parts of programs, based on their types, such as case splitting on a pattern variable, inspecting the type of a hole, and even a basic proof search mechanism. In this section, we explain how these features can be exploited by a text editor, and specifically how to do so in Vim. An interactive mode for Emacs is also available.

Editing at the REPL

The REPL provides a number of commands, which we will describe shortly, which generate new program fragments based on the currently loaded module. These take the general form

:command [line number] [name]

That is, each command acts on a specific source line, at a specific name, and outputs a new program fragment. Each command has an alternative form, which updates the source file in-place:

:command! [line number] [name]

When the REPL is loaded, it also starts a background process which accepts and responds to REPL commands, using idris --client. For example, if we have a REPL running elsewhere, we can execute commands such as:

$ idris --client ':t plus'
Prelude.Nat.plus : Nat -> Nat -> Nat
$ idris --client '2+2'
4 : Integer

A text editor can take advantage of this, along with the editing commands, in order to provide interactive editing support.

Editing Commands

:addclause

The :addclause n f command (abbreviated :ac n f) creates a template definition for the function named f declared on line n. For example, if the code beginning on line 94 contains:

vzipWith : (a -> b -> c) ->
           Vect n a -> Vect n b -> Vect n c

then :ac 94 vzipWith will give:

vzipWith f xs ys = ?vzipWith_rhs

The names are chosen according to hints which may be given by a programmer, and then made unique by the machine by adding a digit if necessary. Hints can be given as follows:

%name Vect xs, ys, zs, ws

This declares that any names generated for types in the Vect family should be chosen in the order xs, ys, zs, ws.

:casesplit

The :casesplit n x command, abbreviated :cs n x, splits the pattern variable x on line n into the various pattern forms it may take, removing any cases which are impossible due to unification errors. For example, if the code beginning on line 94 is:

vzipWith : (a -> b -> c) ->
           Vect n a -> Vect n b -> Vect n c
vzipWith f xs ys = ?vzipWith_rhs

then :cs 96 xs will give:

vzipWith f [] ys = ?vzipWith_rhs_1
vzipWith f (x :: xs) ys = ?vzipWith_rhs_2

That is, the pattern variable xs has been split into the two possible cases [] and x :: xs. Again, the names are chosen according to the same heuristic. If we update the file (using :cs!) then case split on ys on the same line, we get:

vzipWith f [] [] = ?vzipWith_rhs_3

That is, the pattern variable ys has been split into one case [], Idris having noticed that the other possible case y :: ys would lead to a unification error.

:addmissing

The :addmissing n f command, abbreviated :am n f, adds the clauses which are required to make the function f on line n cover all inputs. For example, if the code beginning on line 94 is

vzipWith : (a -> b -> c) ->
           Vect n a -> Vect n b -> Vect n c
vzipWith f [] [] = ?vzipWith_rhs_1

then :am 96 vzipWith gives:

vzipWith f (x :: xs) (y :: ys) = ?vzipWith_rhs_2

That is, it notices that there are no cases for non-empty vectors, generates the required clauses, and eliminates the clauses which would lead to unification errors.

:proofsearch

The :proofsearch n f command, abbreviated :ps n f, attempts to find a value for the hole f on line n by proof search, trying values of local variables, recursive calls and constructors of the required family. Optionally, it can take a list of hints, which are functions it can try applying to solve the hole. For example, if the code beginning on line 94 is:

vzipWith : (a -> b -> c) ->
           Vect n a -> Vect n b -> Vect n c
vzipWith f [] [] = ?vzipWith_rhs_1
vzipWith f (x :: xs) (y :: ys) = ?vzipWith_rhs_2

then :ps 96 vzipWith_rhs_1 will give

[]

This works because it is searching for a Vect of length 0, of which the empty vector is the only possibility. Similarly, and perhaps surprisingly, there is only one possibility if we try to solve :ps 97 vzipWith_rhs_2:

f x y :: (vzipWith f xs ys)

This works because vzipWith has a precise enough type: The resulting vector has to be non-empty (a ::); the first element must have type c and the only way to get this is to apply f to x and y; finally, the tail of the vector can only be built recursively.

:makewith

The :makewith n f command, abbreviated :mw n f, adds a with to a pattern clause. For example, recall parity. If line 10 is:

parity (S k) = ?parity_rhs

then :mw 10 parity will give:

parity (S k) with (_)
  parity (S k) | with_pat = ?parity_rhs

If we then fill in the placeholder _ with parity k and case split on with_pat using :cs 11 with_pat we get the following patterns:

parity (S (plus n n)) | even = ?parity_rhs_1
parity (S (S (plus n n))) | odd = ?parity_rhs_2

Note that case splitting has normalised the patterns here (giving plus rather than +). In any case, we see that using interactive editing significantly simplifies the implementation of dependent pattern matching by showing a programmer exactly what the valid patterns are.

Interactive Editing in Vim

The editor mode for Vim provides syntax highlighting, indentation and interactive editing support using the commands described above. Interactive editing is achieved using the following editor commands, each of which update the buffer directly:

  • \d adds a template definition for the name declared on the

    current line (using :addclause).

  • \c case splits the variable at the cursor (using

    :casesplit).

  • \m adds the missing cases for the name at the cursor (using

    :addmissing).

  • \w adds a with clause (using :makewith).

  • \o invokes a proof search to solve the hole under the

    cursor (using :proofsearch).

  • \p invokes a proof search with additional hints to solve the

    hole under the cursor (using :proofsearch).

There are also commands to invoke the type checker and evaluator:

  • \t displays the type of the (globally visible) name under the

    cursor. In the case of a hole, this displays the context and the expected type.

  • \e prompts for an expression to evaluate.

  • \r reloads and type checks the buffer.

Corresponding commands are also available in the Emacs mode. Support for other editors can be added in a relatively straightforward manner by using idris –client.