Searched for: subject%3A%22semantic%22
(1 - 5 of 5)
document
Miljak, L. (author), Poulsen, C.B. (author), van Spaendonck, Flip (author)
The goal of automated refactoring is to reduce maintenance effort. To realize this, programmers need to be able to trust or manually check that refactorings actually preserve behavior. To allow programmers to focus on such checks, automated refactorings should preserve program well-typedness. However, historically automated refactorings in...
conference paper 2023
document
Rouvoet, A.J. (author), Poulsen, C.B. (author), Krebbers, R.J. (author), Visser, Eelco (author)
An intrinsically-typed definitional interpreter is a concise specification of dynamic semantics, that is executable and type safe by construction. Unfortunately, scaling intrinsically-typed definitional interpreters to more complicated object languages often results in definitions that are cluttered with manual proof work. For linearly-typed...
working paper 2020
document
Rouvoet, A.J. (author), van Antwerpen, H. (author), Poulsen, C.B. (author), Krebbers, R.J. (author), Visser, Eelco (author)
There is a large gap between the specification of type systems and the implementation of their type checkers, which impedes reasoning about the soundness of the type checker with respect to the specification. A vision to close this gap is to automatically obtain type checkers from declarative programming language specifications. This moves...
journal article 2020
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Poulsen, C.B. (author), Rouvoet, A.J. (author), Tolmach, Andrew (author), Krebbers, R.J. (author), Visser, Eelco (author)
A definitional interpreter defines the semantics of an object language in terms of the (well-known) semantics of a host language, enabling understanding and validation of the semantics through execution. Combining a definitional interpreter with a separate type system requires a separate type safety proof. An alternative approach, at least for...
journal article 2018
document
Poulsen, C.B. (author), Neron, P.J.M. (author), Tolmach, Andrew (author), Visser, Eelco (author)
Semantic specifications do not make a systematic connection between the names and scopes in the static structure of a program and memory layout, and access during its execution. In this paper we introduce a systematic approach to the alignment of names in static semantics and memory in dynamic semantics, building on the scope graph framework...
conference paper 2016
Searched for: subject%3A%22semantic%22
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