Current description of Core?
Richard Eisenberg
eir at cis.upenn.edu
Wed Oct 22 14:28:55 UTC 2014
Hi Sophie,
I agree with Simon in that I'm skeptical that arrows should *require* a change in Core, but I'm more willing to believe that a change in Core could permit better optimizations over arrow-intensive code. Though, I would say we should spend some time looking for ways to achieve this without changing Core.
All that said, I'm happy to help you understand Core better, and can explain some of that core-spec document you've been referred to. It's terse, and intended to be a somewhat minimal explanation.
Let me know if I can be of help.
Richard
On Oct 22, 2014, at 6:18 AM, Sophie Taylor <sophie at traumapony.org> wrote:
> Yeah, definitely. Part of the reason why arrow notation is so frustrating at the moment is because it forces everything into lambda calculus; that is, it requires every category to be Cartesian Closed. When your arrow category isn't Cartesian Closed, it raises two issues. 1) When it's not Cartesian, you have to lie and say it supports products instead of tensors (that is, you are able to get back the arguments of a product unchanged, i.e. simple tuples), but this isn't the relevant part for Core. 2) When it's not closed, you have to lie and say it supports higher order functions (i.e., lambda abstractions applied to lambda abstractions) and implement arr. Now, you can lie at the syntax level and typecheck it as kappa calculus (i.e. first order functions only unless you are explicitly a Closed category) but then say it is lambda calculus at the core level; this would work because lambda calculus subsumes kappa calculus. This would allow the optimiser/RULES etc to work unchanged. However, you would lose a lot of the internal consistency checking usefulness of Core, and could miss out on kappa-calculus-specific optimisations (although come to think of it, call arity analysis might solve a lot of this issue).
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> On 22 October 2014 19:59, Simon Peyton Jones <simonpj at microsoft.com> wrote:
> Interesting. There is a pretty high bar for changes to Core itself. Currently arrow notation desugars into Core with no changes. If you want to change Core, then arrow “notation” is actually much more than syntactic sugar. Go for it – but it would be a much more foundational change than previously, and hence would require more motivation.
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> From: Sophie Taylor [mailto:sophie at traumapony.org]
> Sent: 22 October 2014 10:53
> To: Simon Peyton Jones
> Cc: ghc-devs at haskell.org
> Subject: Re: Current description of Core?
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> Ah, thanks HEAPS. I've been banging my head against a wall for the last few days trying to see exactly what is going on :) I'm trying to find a way to minimise/eliminate the changes required to Core for the arrow notation rewrite - specifically, introducing kappa abstraction and application - semantically different to lambda abstraction/application but close enough that I can probably get away with either adding a simple flag to the Abstraction/Application constructors or doing it higher up in the HsExpr land, but the latter method leaves a sour taste in my mouth.
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> On 22 October 2014 19:35, Simon Peyton Jones <simonpj at microsoft.com> wrote:
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> Is the current description of Core still System FC_2 (described in https://www.seas.upenn.edu/~sweirich/papers/popl163af-weirich.pdf)?
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> We never implemented that particular version (too complicated!).
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> This is the full current story (thanks to Richard for keeping it up to date), in the GHC source tree
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> :
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> https://ghc.haskell.org/trac/ghc/browser/ghc/docs/core-spec/core-spec.pdf
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> Simon
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> From: ghc-devs [mailto:ghc-devs-bounces at haskell.org] On Behalf Of Sophie Taylor
> Sent: 22 October 2014 10:26
> To: ghc-devs at haskell.org
> Subject: Current description of Core?
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>
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> Hi,
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> Is the current description of Core still System FC_2 (described in https://www.seas.upenn.edu/~sweirich/papers/popl163af-weirich.pdf)?
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