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authorbringert <bringert@cs.chalmers.se>2005-12-07 10:03:18 +0000
committerbringert <bringert@cs.chalmers.se>2005-12-07 10:03:18 +0000
commit09e62111fd29ec376e3e13ca80cb8e88a47bdea7 (patch)
treec58b7585a999a871d0ec1e0334528e2db0b2bbfb /doc
parent06c3d3e004425ba0e24b88217343b4146885f096 (diff)
Transfer reference: added list patterns, do notation.
Diffstat (limited to 'doc')
-rw-r--r--doc/transfer-reference.html128
-rw-r--r--doc/transfer-reference.txt72
2 files changed, 153 insertions, 47 deletions
diff --git a/doc/transfer-reference.html b/doc/transfer-reference.html
index 820f0f152..7670da8b8 100644
--- a/doc/transfer-reference.html
+++ b/doc/transfer-reference.html
@@ -7,7 +7,7 @@
<P ALIGN="center"><CENTER><H1>Transfer language reference</H1>
<FONT SIZE="4">
<I>Author: Björn Bringert &lt;bringert@cs.chalmers.se&gt;</I><BR>
-Last update: Wed Dec 7 10:45:42 2005
+Last update: Wed Dec 7 11:02:54 2005
</FONT></CENTER>
<P></P>
@@ -29,23 +29,24 @@ Last update: Wed Dec 7 10:45:42 2005
<LI><A HREF="#toc12">Tuples</A>
<LI><A HREF="#toc13">Lists</A>
</UL>
- <LI><A HREF="#toc14">Pattern matching</A>
+ <LI><A HREF="#toc14">Case expressions</A>
+ <LI><A HREF="#patterns">Patterns</A>
<UL>
- <LI><A HREF="#toc15">Constructor patterns</A>
- <LI><A HREF="#toc16">Variable patterns</A>
- <LI><A HREF="#toc17">Wildcard patterns</A>
- <LI><A HREF="#toc18">Record patterns</A>
- <LI><A HREF="#toc19">Disjunctive patterns</A>
- <LI><A HREF="#toc20">List patterns</A>
- <LI><A HREF="#toc21">Tuple patterns</A>
- <LI><A HREF="#toc22">String literal patterns</A>
- <LI><A HREF="#toc23">Integer literal patterns</A>
+ <LI><A HREF="#toc16">Constructor patterns</A>
+ <LI><A HREF="#toc17">Variable patterns</A>
+ <LI><A HREF="#toc18">Wildcard patterns</A>
+ <LI><A HREF="#toc19">Record patterns</A>
+ <LI><A HREF="#toc20">Disjunctive patterns</A>
+ <LI><A HREF="#toc21">List patterns</A>
+ <LI><A HREF="#toc22">Tuple patterns</A>
+ <LI><A HREF="#toc23">String literal patterns</A>
+ <LI><A HREF="#toc24">Integer literal patterns</A>
</UL>
- <LI><A HREF="#toc24">Metavariables</A>
- <LI><A HREF="#toc25">Overloaded functions / Type classes</A>
- <LI><A HREF="#toc26">Operators</A>
- <LI><A HREF="#toc27">Compositional functions</A>
- <LI><A HREF="#toc28">do notation</A>
+ <LI><A HREF="#toc25">Metavariables</A>
+ <LI><A HREF="#toc26">Overloaded functions / Type classes</A>
+ <LI><A HREF="#toc27">Operators</A>
+ <LI><A HREF="#toc28">Compositional functions</A>
+ <LI><A HREF="#toc29">do notation</A>
</UL>
<P></P>
@@ -140,11 +141,14 @@ equations. The first equation whose patterns match the function arguments
is used when the function is called. Pattern equations are on the form:
</P>
<PRE>
- f p1 ... p1n = exp
+ f p11 ... p1m = exp
...
- f qn1 ... qnm = exp
+ f pn1 ... pnm = exp
</PRE>
<P></P>
+<P>
+where <CODE>p11</CODE> to <CODE>pnm</CODE> are patterns, see <A HREF="#patterns">Patterns</A>.
+</P>
<A NAME="toc5"></A>
<H2>Data type declarations</H2>
<P>
@@ -238,7 +242,7 @@ in the type. Such dependent function types are written:
<P></P>
<P>
Here, <CODE>x1</CODE> can be used in <CODE>T2</CODE> to <CODE>Tn</CODE>, <CODE>x1</CODE> can be used
-in <CODE>T2</CODE> to <CODE>Tn</CODE>
+in <CODE>T2</CODE> to <CODE>Tn</CODE>.
</P>
<A NAME="toc10"></A>
<H3>Basic types</H3>
@@ -355,7 +359,7 @@ be used instead of <CODE>Cons</CODE>. These are just syntactic sugar for express
using <CODE>Nil</CODE> and <CODE>Cons</CODE>, with the type arguments hidden.
</P>
<A NAME="toc14"></A>
-<H2>Pattern matching</H2>
+<H2>Case expressions</H2>
<P>
Pattern matching is done in pattern equations and by using the
<CODE>case</CODE> construct:
@@ -368,6 +372,7 @@ Pattern matching is done in pattern equations and by using the
</PRE>
<P></P>
<P>
+where <CODE>p1</CODE> to <CODE>pn</CODE> are patterns, see <A HREF="#patterns">Patterns</A>.
<CODE>guard1</CODE> to <CODE>guardn</CODE> are boolean expressions. Case arms can also be written
without guards, such as:
</P>
@@ -382,10 +387,9 @@ This is the same as writing:
pk | True -&gt; rhsk
</PRE>
<P></P>
-<P>
-The syntax of patterns are decribed below.
-</P>
-<A NAME="toc15"></A>
+<A NAME="patterns"></A>
+<H2>Patterns</H2>
+<A NAME="toc16"></A>
<H3>Constructor patterns</H3>
<P>
Constructor patterns are written as:
@@ -400,7 +404,7 @@ If the value to be matched is the constructor <CODE>C</CODE> applied to
arguments <CODE>v1</CODE> to <CODE>vn</CODE>, then <CODE>v1</CODE> to <CODE>vn</CODE> will be matched
against <CODE>p1</CODE> to <CODE>pn</CODE>.
</P>
-<A NAME="toc16"></A>
+<A NAME="toc17"></A>
<H3>Variable patterns</H3>
<P>
A variable pattern is a single identifier:
@@ -413,7 +417,7 @@ A variable pattern is a single identifier:
A variable pattern matches any value, and binds the variable name to the
value. A variable may not occur more than once in a pattern.
</P>
-<A NAME="toc17"></A>
+<A NAME="toc18"></A>
<H3>Wildcard patterns</H3>
<P>
Wildcard patterns are written as with a single underscore:
@@ -425,7 +429,7 @@ Wildcard patterns are written as with a single underscore:
<P>
Wildcard patterns match all values and bind no variables.
</P>
-<A NAME="toc18"></A>
+<A NAME="toc19"></A>
<H3>Record patterns</H3>
<P>
Record patterns match record values:
@@ -442,7 +446,7 @@ fields <CODE>l1</CODE> to <CODE>ln</CODE>, and their values match <CODE>p1</CODE
Note that a record value may have more fields than the record pattern and
they will still match.
</P>
-<A NAME="toc19"></A>
+<A NAME="toc20"></A>
<H3>Disjunctive patterns</H3>
<P>
It is possible to write a pattern on the form:
@@ -455,9 +459,39 @@ It is possible to write a pattern on the form:
A value will match this pattern if it matches any of the patterns <CODE>p1</CODE> to <CODE>pn</CODE>.
FIXME: talk about how this is expanded
</P>
-<A NAME="toc20"></A>
-<H3>List patterns</H3>
<A NAME="toc21"></A>
+<H3>List patterns</H3>
+<P>
+When pattern matching in lists, there are two special constructs.
+A whole list can be matched be a list of patterns:
+</P>
+<PRE>
+ [p1, ... , pn]
+</PRE>
+<P></P>
+<P>
+This pattern will match lists of length n, such that each element
+in the list matches the corresponding pattern. The empty list pattern:
+</P>
+<PRE>
+ []
+</PRE>
+<P></P>
+<P>
+is a special case of this. It matches the empty list, oddly enough.
+</P>
+<P>
+Non-empty lists can also be matched with <CODE>::</CODE>-patterns:
+</P>
+<PRE>
+ p1::p2
+</PRE>
+<P></P>
+<P>
+This pattern matches a non-empty lists such that the first element of
+the list matches <CODE>p1</CODE> and the rest of the list matches <CODE>p2</CODE>.
+</P>
+<A NAME="toc22"></A>
<H3>Tuple patterns</H3>
<P>
Tuples patterns on the form:
@@ -469,17 +503,17 @@ Tuples patterns on the form:
<P>
are syntactic sugar for record patterns, in the same way as tuple expressions.
</P>
-<A NAME="toc22"></A>
+<A NAME="toc23"></A>
<H3>String literal patterns</H3>
<P>
String literals can be used as patterns.
</P>
-<A NAME="toc23"></A>
+<A NAME="toc24"></A>
<H3>Integer literal patterns</H3>
<P>
Integer literals can be used as patterns.
</P>
-<A NAME="toc24"></A>
+<A NAME="toc25"></A>
<H2>Metavariables</H2>
<P>
Metavariable are written as questions marks:
@@ -494,17 +528,33 @@ A metavariable is a way to the the Transfer type checker that:
I can't be bothered to tell you".
</P>
<P>
-Metavariables can be used to avoid having to give type variables
-and dictionaries explicitly.
+Metavariables can be used to avoid having to give type
+and dictionary arguments explicitly.
</P>
-<A NAME="toc25"></A>
-<H2>Overloaded functions / Type classes</H2>
<A NAME="toc26"></A>
-<H2>Operators</H2>
+<H2>Overloaded functions / Type classes</H2>
<A NAME="toc27"></A>
-<H2>Compositional functions</H2>
+<H2>Operators</H2>
<A NAME="toc28"></A>
+<H2>Compositional functions</H2>
+<A NAME="toc29"></A>
<H2>do notation</H2>
+<P>
+Sequences of operations in the Monad type class can be written
+using do-notation, like in Haskell:
+</P>
+<PRE>
+ do x &lt;- f
+ y &lt;- g x
+ h y
+</PRE>
+<P></P>
+<P>
+is equivalent to:
+</P>
+<PRE>
+ f &gt;&gt;= \x -&gt; g x &gt;&gt;= \y -&gt; h y
+</PRE>
<!-- html code generated by txt2tags 2.0 (http://txt2tags.sf.net) -->
<!-- cmdline: txt2tags transfer-reference.txt -->
diff --git a/doc/transfer-reference.txt b/doc/transfer-reference.txt
index a7d534363..5ebff583a 100644
--- a/doc/transfer-reference.txt
+++ b/doc/transfer-reference.txt
@@ -61,6 +61,7 @@ braces and semicolons. Thus the above is equivalent to:
case x of { p1 -> e1 ; p2 -> e2 }
```
+
== Imports ==
A Transfer module start with some imports. Most modules will have to
@@ -89,11 +90,13 @@ equations. The first equation whose patterns match the function arguments
is used when the function is called. Pattern equations are on the form:
```
-f p1 ... p1n = exp
+f p11 ... p1m = exp
...
-f qn1 ... qnm = exp
+f pn1 ... pnm = exp
```
+where ``p11`` to ``pnm`` are patterns, see [Patterns #patterns].
+
== Data type declarations ==
@@ -137,7 +140,6 @@ let x1 : T1 = exp1
```
-
== Types ==
=== Function types ===[function_types]
@@ -182,7 +184,8 @@ in the type. Such dependent function types are written:
```
Here, ``x1`` can be used in ``T2`` to ``Tn``, ``x1`` can be used
-in ``T2`` to ``Tn``
+in ``T2`` to ``Tn``.
+
=== Basic types ===
@@ -191,12 +194,14 @@ in ``T2`` to ``Tn``
The type of integers is called ``Integer``.
standard decmial integer literals are used to represent values of this type.
+
==== Floating-point numbers ====
The only currently supported floating-point type is ``Double``, which supports
IEEE-754 double-precision floating-point numbers. Double literals are written
in decimal notation, e.g. ``123.456``.
+
==== Strings ====
There is a primitive ``String`` type. This might be replaced by a list of
@@ -255,12 +260,14 @@ rec p1 = exp1
pn = expn
```
+
==== Record subtyping ====
A record of some type R1 can be used as a record of any type R2
such that for every field ``p1 : T1`` in R2, ``p1 : T1`` is also a
field of T1.
+
=== Tuples ===
Tuples on the form:
@@ -293,7 +300,7 @@ be used instead of ``Cons``. These are just syntactic sugar for expressions
using ``Nil`` and ``Cons``, with the type arguments hidden.
-== Pattern matching ==
+== Case expressions ==
Pattern matching is done in pattern equations and by using the
``case`` construct:
@@ -305,6 +312,7 @@ case exp of
pn | guardn -> rhsn
```
+where ``p1`` to ``pn`` are patterns, see [Patterns #patterns].
``guard1`` to ``guardn`` are boolean expressions. Case arms can also be written
without guards, such as:
@@ -318,7 +326,8 @@ This is the same as writing:
pk | True -> rhsk
```
-The syntax of patterns are decribed below.
+
+== Patterns ==[patterns]
=== Constructor patterns ===
@@ -386,6 +395,32 @@ FIXME: talk about how this is expanded
=== List patterns ===
+When pattern matching in lists, there are two special constructs.
+A whole list can be matched be a list of patterns:
+
+```
+[p1, ... , pn]
+```
+
+This pattern will match lists of length n, such that each element
+in the list matches the corresponding pattern. The empty list pattern:
+
+```
+[]
+```
+
+is a special case of this. It matches the empty list, oddly enough.
+
+Non-empty lists can also be matched with ``::``-patterns:
+
+```
+p1::p2
+```
+
+This pattern matches a non-empty lists such that the first element of
+the list matches ``p1`` and the rest of the list matches ``p2``.
+
+
=== Tuple patterns ===
Tuples patterns on the form:
@@ -418,14 +453,35 @@ A metavariable is a way to the the Transfer type checker that:
"you should be able to figure out what this should be,
I can't be bothered to tell you".
-Metavariables can be used to avoid having to give type variables
-and dictionaries explicitly.
+Metavariables can be used to avoid having to give type
+and dictionary arguments explicitly.
+
== Overloaded functions / Type classes ==
+
+
== Operators ==
+
+
== Compositional functions ==
+
+
== do notation ==
+Sequences of operations in the Monad type class can be written
+using do-notation, like in Haskell:
+
+```
+do x <- f
+ y <- g x
+ h y
+```
+
+is equivalent to:
+
+```
+f >>= \x -> g x >>= \y -> h y
+```