Miscellaneous

Things we have yet to classify, or are two small to justify their own page.

The Unifier Log

If you’re having a hard time debugging why the unifier won’t accept something (often while debugging the compiler itself), try applying the special operator %unifyLog to the expression in question. This will cause the type checker to spit out all sorts of informative messages.

Namespaces and type-directed disambiguation

Names can be defined in separate namespaces, and disambiguated by type. An expression with NAME EXPR will privilege the namespace NAME in the expression EXPR. For example:

Idris> with List [[1,2],[3,4],[5,6]]
[[1, 2], [3, 4], [5, 6]] : List (List Integer)

Idris> with Vect [[1,2],[3,4],[5,6]]
[[1, 2], [3, 4], [5, 6]] : Vect 3 (Vect 2 Integer)

Idris> [[1,2],[3,4],[5,6]]
Can't disambiguate name: Prelude.List.::, Prelude.Stream.::, Prelude.Vect.::

Alternatives

The syntax (| option1, option2, option3, ... |) type checks each of the options in turn until one of them works. This is used, for example, when translating integer literals.

Idris> the Nat (| "foo", Z, (-3) |)
0 : Nat

This can also be used to give simple automated proofs, for example: trying some constructors of proofs.

syntax Trivial = (| Oh, Refl |)

Totality checking assertions

All definitions are checked for coverage (i.e. all well-typed applications are handled) and either for termination (i.e. all well-typed applications will eventually produce an answer) or, if returning codata, for productivity (in practice, all recursive calls are constructor guarded).

Obviously, termination checking is undecidable. In practice, the termination checker looks for size change - every cycle of recursive calls must have a decreasing argument, such as a recursive argument of a strictly positive data type.

There are two built-in functions which can be used to give the totality checker a hint:

  • assert_total x asserts that the expression x is terminating and covering, even if the totality checker cannot tell. This can be used for example if x uses a function which does not cover all inputs, but the caller knows that the specific input is covered.
  • assert_smaller p x asserts that the expression x is structurally smaller than the pattern p.

For example, the following function is not checked as total:

qsort : Ord a => List a -> List a
qsort [] = []
qsort (x :: xs) = qsort (filter (<= x) xs) ++ (x :: qsort (filter (>= x) xs)))

This is because the checker cannot tell that filter will always produce a value smaller than the pattern x :: xs for the recursive call to qsort. We can assert that this will always be true as follows:

total
qsort : Ord a => List a -> List a
qsort [] = []
qsort (x :: xs) = qsort (assert_smaller (x :: xs) (filter (<= x) xs)) ++
                  (x :: qsort (assert_smaller (x :: xs) (filter (>= x) xs))))

C heap

Idris has two heaps where objects can be allocated:

FP heap C heap
Cheney-collected Mark-and-sweep-collected
Garbage collections touches only live objects. Garbage collection has to traverse all registered items.
Ideal for FP-style rapid allocation of lots of small short-lived pieces of memory, such as data constructors. Ideal for C-style allocation of a few big buffers.
Finalizers are impossible to support reasonably. Items have finalizers that are called on deallocation.
Data is copied all the time (when collecting garbage, modifying data, registering managed pointers, etc.) Copying does not happen.
Contains objects of various types. Contains C heap items: (void *) pointers with finalizers. A finalizer is a routine that deallocates the resources associated with the item.
Fixed set of object types. The data pointer may point to anything, as long as the finalizer cleans up correctly.
Not suitable for C resources and arbitrary pointers. Suitable for C resources and arbitrary pointers.
Values form a compact memory block. Items are kept in a linked list.
Any Idris value, most notably ManagedPtr. Items represented by the Idris type CData.
Data of ManagedPtr allocated in C, buffer then copied into the FP heap. Data allocated in C, pointer copied into the C heap.
Allocation and reallocation not possible from C code (without having a reference to the VM). Everything is copied instead. Allocated and reallocate freely in C, registering the allocated items in the FFI.

The FP heap is the primary heap. It may contain values of type CData, which are references to items in the C heap. A C heap item contains a (void *) pointer and the corresponding finalizer. Once a C heap item is no longer referenced from the FP heap, it is marked as unused and the next GC sweep will call its finalizer and deallocate it.

There is no Idris interface for CData other than its type and FFI.

Usage from C code

  • Although not enforced in code, CData is meant to be opaque and non-RTS code (such as libraries or C bindings) should access only its (void *) field called data.
  • Feel free to mutate both the pointer data (eg. after calling realloc) and the memory it points to. However, keep in mind that this must not break Idris’s referential transparency.
  • WARNING! If you call cdata_allocate or cdata_manage, the resulting CData object must be returned from your FFI function so that it is inserted in the C heap by the RTS. Otherwise the memory will be leaked.
some_allocating_fun : Int -> IO CData
some_allocating_fun i = foreign FFI_C "some_allocating_fun" (Int -> IO CData) i

other_fun : CData -> Int -> IO Int
other_fun cd i = foreign FFI_C "other_fun" (CData -> Int -> IO Int) cd i
#include "idris_rts.h"

static void finalizer(void * data)
{
    MyStruct * ptr = (MyStruct *) data;
    free_something(ptr->something);
    free(ptr);
}

CData some_allocating_fun(int arg)
{
    void * data = (void *) malloc(...);
    // ...
    return cdata_manage(data, finalizer);
}

int other_fun(CData cd, int arg)
{
    int result = foo(cd->data);
    return result;
}

Preorder reasoning

This syntax is defined in the module Syntax.PreorderReasoning in the base package. It provides a syntax for composing proofs of reflexive-transitive relations, using overloadable functions called step and qed. This module also defines step and qed functions allowing the syntax to be used for demonstrating equality. Here is an example:

import Syntax.PreorderReasoning
multThree : (a, b, c : Nat) -> a * b * c = c * a * b
multThree a b c =
  (a * b * c) ={ sym (multAssociative a b c) }=
  (a * (b * c)) ={ cong (multCommutative b c) }=
  (a * (c * b)) ={ multAssociative a c b }=
  (a * c * b) ={ cong {f = (* b)} (multCommutative a c) }=
  (c * a * b) QED

Note that the parentheses are required – only a simple expression can be on the left of ={ }= or QED. Also, when using preorder reasoning syntax to prove things about equality, remember that you can only relate the entire expression, not subexpressions. This might occasionally require the use of cong.

Finally, although equality is the most obvious application of preorder reasoning, it can be used for any reflexive-transitive relation. Something like step1 ={ just1 }= step2 ={ just2 }= end QED is translated to (step step1 just1 (step step2 just2 (qed end))), selecting the appropriate definitions of step and qed through the normal disambiguation process. The standard library, for example, also contains an implementation of preorder reasoning on isomorphisms.

Pattern matching on Implicit Arguments

Pattern matching is only allowed on implicit arguments when they are referred by name, e.g.

foo : {n : Nat} -> Nat
foo {n = Z} = Z
foo {n = S k} = k

or

foo : {n : Nat} -> Nat
foo {n = n} = n

The latter could be shortened to the following:

foo : {n : Nat} -> Nat
foo {n} = n

That is, {x} behaves like {x=x}.

Existence of an implementation

In order to show that an implementation of some interface is defined for some type, one could use the %implementation keyword:

foo : Num Nat
foo = %implementation

‘match’ application

ty <== name applies the function name in such a way that it has the type ty, by matching ty against the function’s type. This can be used in proofs, for example:

plus_comm : (n : Nat) -> (m : Nat) -> (n + m = m + n)
-- Base case
(Z + m = m + Z) <== plus_comm =
    rewrite ((m + Z = m) <== plusZeroRightNeutral) ==>
            (Z + m = m) in Refl

-- Step case
(S k + m = m + S k) <== plus_comm =
    rewrite ((k + m = m + k) <== plus_comm) in
    rewrite ((S (m + k) = m + S k) <== plusSuccRightSucc) in
        Refl

Reflection

Including %reflection functions and quoteGoal x by fn in t, which applies fn to the expected type of the current expression, and puts the result in x which is in scope when elaborating t.

Bash Completion

Use of optparse-applicative allows Idris to support Bash completion. You can obtain the completion script for Idris using the following command:

idris --bash-completion-script `which idris`

To enable completion for the lifetime of your current session, run the following command:

source <(idris --bash-completion-script `which idris`)

To enable completion permenatly you must either:

  • Modify your bash init script with the above command.
  • Add the completion script to the appropriate bash_completion.d/ folder on your machine.