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2800e2bd75 Notes on escape 2020-11-08 22:32:28 +00:00
f56901ad4b Extend Table 4.2 2020-11-08 16:54:50 +00:00
2 changed files with 156 additions and 8 deletions

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@@ -1798,6 +1798,36 @@
year = 2020
}
# Gauche
@misc{Kawai20,
author = {Shiro Kawai},
title = {{Gauche} Users' Reference (version 0.9.9)},
year = 2019
}
# OchaCaml
@inproceedings{MasukoA11,
author = {Moe Masuko and Kenchi Asai},
title = {{Caml} {Light} + shift/reset = {Caml} {Shift}},
booktitle = {Theory and Practice of Delimited Continuations ({TPDC})},
year = 2011,
pages = {33--46}
}
# Shift/reset in Scala
@inproceedings{RompfMO09,
author = {Tiark Rompf and
Ingo Maier and
Martin Odersky},
title = {Implementing first-class polymorphic delimited continuations by a
type-directed selective CPS-transform},
booktitle = {{ICFP}},
pages = {317--328},
publisher = {{ACM}},
year = {2009}
}
# First implementation of threads using continuations
@InProceedings{Burstall69,
author = {Rod M. Burstall},
@@ -1855,3 +1885,28 @@
year = 2014,
month = jan
}
# Comparison of control operators via double barrelled CPS
@article{Thielecke02,
author = {Hayo Thielecke},
title = {Comparing Control Constructs by Double-Barrelled {CPS}},
journal = {High. Order Symb. Comput.},
volume = {15},
number = {2-3},
pages = {141--160},
year = {2002}
}
# Comparison of effect handlers and shift/reset in a polymorphic type system
@inproceedings{PirogPS19,
author = {Maciej Pir{\'{o}}g and
Piotr Polesiuk and
Filip Sieczkowski},
title = {Typed Equivalence of Effect Handlers and Delimited Control},
booktitle = {{FSCD}},
series = {LIPIcs},
volume = {131},
pages = {30:1--30:16},
publisher = {Schloss Dagstuhl - Leibniz-Zentrum f{\"{u}}r Informatik},
year = {2019}
}

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@@ -542,6 +542,26 @@ wide range of control operators from the literature.
% callcc is a procedural variation of catch. It was invented in
% 1982~\cite{AbelsonHAKBOBPCRFRHSHW85}.
A full formal comparison of the control operators is out of scope of
this chapter. The literature contains comparisons of various control
operators along various dimensions, e.g.
%
\citet{Thielecke02} studies a handful of operators via double
barrelled continuation passing style. \citet{ForsterKLP19} compare the
relative expressiveness of untyped and simply-typed variations of
effect handlers, shift/reset, and monadic reflection by means of
whether they are macro-expressible. Their work demonstrates that in an
untyped setting each operator is macro-expressible, but in most cases
the macro-translations do not preserve typeability, for instance the
simple type structure is insufficient to type the image of
macro-translation between effect handlers and shift/reset.
%
However, \citet{PirogPS19} show that with a polymorphic type system
the translation preserve typeability.
%
\citet{Shan04} shows that dynamic delimited control and static
delimited control is macro-expressible in an untyped setting.
\section{Notions of continuations}
% \citeauthor{Reynolds93} has written a historical account of the
@@ -712,6 +732,46 @@ and callcc turned out to be essentially the same operator.
statement-oriented control mechanisms such as jumps and labels
programmable in an expression-oriented language.
%
The operator introduces a new computation form.
%
\[
M, N \in \CompCat ::= \cdots \mid \Escape\;k\;\In\;M
\]
%
The variable $k$ is called the \emph{escape variable} and it is bound
in $M$. The escape variable exposes the current continuation of the
$\Escape$-expression to the programmer. The captured continuation is
abortive, thus an invocation of the escape variable in the body $M$
has the effect of performing a non-local exit.
%
In terms of jumps and labels the $\Escape$-expression can be
understood as corresponding to a kind of label and an application of
the escape variable $k$ can be understood as corresponding to a jump
to the label.
\citeauthor{Reynolds98a}' original treatise of escape was untyped, and
as such, the escape variable could escape its captor, e.g.
%
\[
\Let\;k \revto (\Escape\;k\;\In\;k)\;\In\; N
\]
%
Here the current continuation, $N$, gets bound to $k$ in the
$\Escape$-expression, which returns $k$ as-is, and thus becomes
available for use within $N$. \citeauthor{Reynolds98a} recognised the
power of this idiom and noted that it could be used to implement
coroutines and backtracking~\cite{Reynolds98a}.
%
In our simply-typed setting it is not possible for the continuation to
propagate outside its binding $\Escape$-expression as it would require
the addition of either recursive types or some other escape hatch like
mutable reference cells.
%
The typing of $\Escape$ and $\Continue$ reflects that the captured
continuation is abortive.
%
\begin{mathpar}
\inferrule*
{\typ{\Gamma,k : \Cont\,\Record{A;\Zero}}{M : A}}
@@ -722,11 +782,23 @@ programmable in an expression-oriented language.
{\typ{\Gamma}{\Continue~W~V : \Zero}}
\end{mathpar}
%
The return type of the continuation object can be taken as a telltale
sign that an invocation of this object never returns, since there are
no inhabitants of the empty type.
%
An invocation of the continuation discards the invocation context and
plugs the argument into the captured context.
%
\begin{reductions}
\slab{Capture} & \EC[\Escape\;k\;\In\;M] &\reducesto& \EC[M[\cont_{\EC}/k]]\\
\slab{Resume} & \EC[\Continue~\cont_{\EC'}~V] &\reducesto& \EC'[V]
\end{reductions}
%
The \slab{Capture} rule leaves the context intact such that if the
body $M$ does not invoke $k$ then whatever value $M$ reduces is
plugged into the context. The \slab{Resume} discards the current
context $\EC$ and installs the captured context $\EC'$ with the
argument $V$ plugged in.
\paragraph{Sussman and Steele's catch}
%
@@ -852,7 +924,7 @@ the correspondence between labels and J.
\[
\ba{@{}l@{~}l}
&\sembr{\keyw{begin}\;s_1;\;\keyw{goto}\;L;\;L:\,s_2\;\keyw{end}}\\
=& \lambda\Unit.\Let\;L \revto \J\,\sembr{s_2}\;\In\;\Let\;\Unit \revto \sembr{s_1}\,\Unit\;\In\;L\,\Unit
=& \lambda\Unit.\Let\;L \revto \J\,\sembr{s_2}\;\In\;\Let\;\Unit \revto \sembr{s_1}\,\Unit\;\In\;\Continue~L\,\Unit
\ea
\]
%
@@ -894,7 +966,7 @@ However, if $g$ does apply its argument, then the value provided to
the application becomes the return value of $\dec{f}$, e.g.
%
\[
\dec{f}~(\lambda return.return~\False) \reducesto^+ \False
\dec{f}~(\lambda return.\Continue~return~\False) \reducesto^+ \False
\]
%
The function argument provided to $\J$ can intuitively be thought of
@@ -945,9 +1017,12 @@ instead with the $\J$-argument $W$ applied to the value $V$.
Let us end by remarking that the J operator is expressive enough to
encode a familiar control operator like $\Callcc$.
%
\[
\Callcc \defas \lambda f. f\,(\J\,(\lambda x.x))
\]
%
\subsection{Delimited operators}
Delimited control: Control delimiters form the basis for delimited
@@ -1088,22 +1163,40 @@ implementation strategies.
\begin{table}
\centering
\begin{tabular}{| l | >{\raggedright}p{4.5cm} | l |}
\begin{tabular}{| l | >{\raggedright}p{4.3cm} | l |}
\hline
\multicolumn{1}{|c|}{\textbf{Language}} & \multicolumn{1}{c |}{\textbf{Control operators}} & \multicolumn{1}{c|}{\textbf{Implementation strategies}}\\
\hline
Eff & Effect handlers & Virtual machine, interpreter \\
\hline
Effekt & Lexical effect handlers & ??\\
\hline
Frank & N-ary effect handlers & Abstract machine \\
\hline
Gauche & callcc, shift/reset & Virtual machine \\
\hline
Helium & Effect handlers & CEK machine \\
\hline
Koka & Effect handlers & Continuation monad\\
\hline
Links & Effect handlers, escape & CEK machine, CPS\\
\hline
MLton & callcc & Stack copying\\
\hline
Multicore OCaml & Effect handlers & Segmented stacks\\
Multicore OCaml & Affine effect handlers & Segmented stacks\\
\hline
Racket & callcc, callcc$^{\ast}$, fcontrol, prompt/control, shift/reset, splitter, spawn & Continuation marks\\
OchaCaml & shift/reset & Virtual machine\\
\hline
Rhino JavaScript & A variation of J & Interpreter \\
Racket & callcc, callcc$^{\ast}$, cupto, fcontrol, prompt/control, shift/reset, splitter, spawn & Continuation marks\\
\hline
Rhino JavaScript & JI & Interpreter \\
\hline
Scala & shift/reset & CPS\\
\hline
SML/NJ & callcc & CPS\\
\hline
Wasm/k & prompt/control & ?? \\
\hline
\end{tabular}
\caption{Some languages and their implementation strategies for first-class control.}\label{tbl:ctrl-operators-impls}
\end{table}