| 1 | ## User-defined Conversions ##
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| 2 | C's implicit "usual arithmetic conversions" define a structure among the 
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| 3 | built-in types consisting of _unsafe_ narrowing conversions and a hierarchy of 
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| 4 | _safe_ widening conversions. 
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| 5 | There is also a set of _explicit_ conversions that are only allowed through a 
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| 6 | cast expression.
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| 7 | Based on Glen's notes on conversions [1], I propose that safe and unsafe 
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| 8 | conversions be expressed as constructor variants, though I make explicit 
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| 9 | (cast) conversions a constructor variant as well rather than a dedicated 
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| 10 | operator. 
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| 11 | Throughout this article, I will use the following operator names for 
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| 12 | constructors and conversion functions from `From` to `To`:
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| 13 | 
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| 14 |         void ?{} ( To*, To );            // copy constructor
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| 15 |         void ?{} ( To*, From );          // explicit constructor
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| 16 |         void ?{explicit} ( To*, From );  // explicit cast conversion
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| 17 |         void ?{safe} ( To*, From );      // implicit safe conversion
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| 18 |         void ?{unsafe} ( To*, From );    // implicit unsafe conversion
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| 19 | 
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| 20 | [1] http://plg.uwaterloo.ca/~cforall/Conversions/index.html
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| 21 | 
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| 22 | Glen's design made no distinction between constructors and unsafe implicit 
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| 23 | conversions; this is elegant, but interacts poorly with tuples. 
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| 24 | Essentially, without making this distinction, a constructor like the following 
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| 25 | would add an interpretation of any two `int`s as a `Coord`, needlessly 
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| 26 | multiplying the space of possible interpretations of all functions:
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| 27 | 
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| 28 |         void ?{}( Coord *this, int x, int y );
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| 29 | 
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| 30 | That said, it would certainly be possible to make a multiple-argument implicit 
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| 31 | conversion, as below, though the argument above suggests this option should be 
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| 32 | used infrequently:
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| 33 | 
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| 34 |         void ?{unsafe}( Coord *this, int x, int y );
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| 35 | 
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| 36 | An alternate possibility would be to only count two-arg constructors 
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| 37 | `void ?{} ( To*, From )` as unsafe conversions; under this semantics, safe and 
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| 38 | explicit conversions should also have a compiler-enforced restriction to 
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| 39 | ensure that they are two-arg functions (this restriction may be valuable 
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| 40 | regardless).
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| 41 | 
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| 42 | Regardless of syntax, there should be a type assertion that expresses `From` 
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| 43 | is convertable to `To`. 
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| 44 | If user-defined conversions are not added to the language, 
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| 45 | `void ?{} ( To*, From )` may be a suitable representation, relying on 
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| 46 | conversions on the argument types to account for transitivity. 
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| 47 | On the other hand, `To*` should perhaps match its target type exactly, so 
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| 48 | another assertion syntax specific to conversions may be required, e.g. 
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| 49 | `From -> To`.
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| 50 | 
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| 51 | ### Constructor Idiom ###
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| 52 | Basing our notion of conversions off otherwise normal Cforall functions means 
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| 53 | that we can use the full range of Cforall features for conversions, including 
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| 54 | polymorphism.
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| 55 | Glen [1] defines a _constructor idiom_ that can be used to create chains of 
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| 56 | safe conversions without duplicating code; given a type `Safe` which members 
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| 57 | of another type `From` can be directly converted to, the constructor idiom 
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| 58 | allows us to write a conversion for any type `To` which `Safe` converts to: 
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| 59 | 
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| 60 |         forall(otype To | { void ?{safe}( To*, Safe ) })
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| 61 |         void ?{safe}( To *this, From that ) {
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| 62 |                 Safe tmp = /* some expression involving that */;
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| 63 |                 *this = tmp; // uses assertion parameter
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| 64 |         }
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| 65 | 
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| 66 | This idiom can also be used with only minor variations for a parallel set of 
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| 67 | unsafe conversions.
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| 68 | 
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| 69 | What selective non-use of the constructor idiom gives us is the ability to 
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| 70 | define a conversion that may only be the *last* conversion in a chain of such. 
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| 71 | Constructing a conversion graph able to unambiguously represent the full 
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| 72 | hierarchy of implicit conversions in C is provably impossible using only 
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| 73 | single-step conversions with no additional information (see Appendix A), but 
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| 74 | this mechanism is sufficiently powerful (see [1], though the design there has 
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| 75 | some minor bugs; the general idea is to use the constructor idiom to define 
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| 76 | two chains of conversions, one among the signed integral types, another among 
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| 77 | the unsigned, and to use monomorphic conversions to allow conversions between 
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| 78 | signed and unsigned integer types).
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| 79 | 
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| 80 | ### Appendix A: Partial and Total Orders ###
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| 81 | The `<=` relation on integers is a commonly known _total order_, and 
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| 82 | intuitions based on how it works generally apply well to other total orders. 
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| 83 | Formally, a total order is some binary relation `<=` over a set `S` such that 
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| 84 | for any two members `a` and `b` of `S`, `a <= b` or `b <= a` (if both, `a` and 
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| 85 | `b` must be equal, the _antisymmetry_ property); total orders also have a 
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| 86 | _transitivity_ property, that if `a <= b` and `b <= c`, then `a <= c`. 
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| 87 | If `a` and `b` are distinct elements and `a <= b`, we may write `a < b`.
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| 88 |  
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| 89 | A _partial order_ is a generalization of this concept where the `<=` relation 
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| 90 | is not required to be defined over all pairs of elements in `S` (though there 
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| 91 | is a _reflexivity_ requirement that for all `a` in `S`, `a <= a`); in other 
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| 92 | words, it is possible for two elements `a` and `b` of `S` to be 
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| 93 | _incomparable_, unable to be ordered with respect to one another (any `a` and 
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| 94 | `b` for which either `a <= b` or `b <= a` are called _comparable_). 
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| 95 | Antisymmetry and transitivity are also required for a partial order, so all 
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| 96 | total orders are also partial orders by definition. 
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| 97 | One fairly natural partial order is the "subset of" relation over sets from 
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| 98 | the same universe; `{ }` is a subset of both `{ 1 }` and `{ 2 }`, which are 
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| 99 | both subsets of `{ 1, 2 }`, but neither `{ 1 }` nor `{ 2 }` is a subset of the 
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| 100 | other - they are incomparable under this relation. 
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| 101 | 
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| 102 | We can compose two (or more) partial orders to produce a new partial order on 
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| 103 | tuples drawn from both (or all the) sets. 
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| 104 | For example, given `a` and `c` from set `S` and `b` and `d` from set `R`, 
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| 105 | where both `S` and `R` both have partial orders defined on them, we can define 
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| 106 | a ordering relation between `(a, b)` and `(c, d)`. 
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| 107 | One common order is the _lexicographical order_, where `(a, b) <= (c, d)` iff 
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| 108 | `a < c` or both `a = c` and `b <= d`; this can be thought of as ordering by 
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| 109 | the first set and "breaking ties" by the second set. 
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| 110 | Another common order is the _product order_, which can be roughly thought of 
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| 111 | as "all the components are ordered the same way"; formally `(a, b) <= (c, d)` 
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| 112 | iff `a <= c` and `b <= d`. 
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| 113 | One difference between the lexicographical order and the product order is that 
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| 114 | in the lexicographical order if both `a` and `c` and `b` and `d` are 
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| 115 | comparable then `(a, b)` and `(c, d)` will be comparable, while in the product 
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| 116 | order you can have `a <= c` and `d <= b` (both comparable) which will make 
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| 117 | `(a, b)` and `(c, d)` incomparable. 
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| 118 | The product order, on the other hand, has the benefit of not prioritizing one 
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| 119 | order over the other.
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| 120 | 
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| 121 | Any partial order has a natural representation as a directed acyclic graph 
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| 122 | (DAG). 
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| 123 | Each element `a` of the set becomes a node of the DAG, with an arc pointing to 
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| 124 | its _covering_ elements, any element `b` such that `a < b` but where there is 
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| 125 | no `c` such that `a < c` and `c < b`. 
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| 126 | Intuitively, the covering elements are the "next ones larger", where you can't 
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| 127 | fit another element between the two. 
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| 128 | Under this construction, `a < b` is equivalent to "there is a path from `a` to 
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| 129 | `b` in the DAG", and the lack of cycles in the directed graph is ensured by 
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| 130 | the antisymmetry property of the partial order.
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| 131 | 
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| 132 | Partial orders can be generalized to _preorders_ by removing the antisymmetry 
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| 133 | property. 
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| 134 | In a preorder the relation is generally called `<~`, and it is possible for 
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| 135 | two distict elements `a` and `b` to have `a <~ b` and `b <~ a` - in this case 
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| 136 | we write `a ~ b`; `a <~ b` and not `a ~ b` is written `a < b`. 
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| 137 | Preorders may also be represented as directed graphs, but in this case the 
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| 138 | graph may contain cycles.
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| 139 | 
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| 140 | ### Appendix B: Building a Conversion Graph from Un-annotated Single Steps ###
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| 141 | The short answer is that it's impossible.
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| 142 | 
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| 143 | The longer answer is that it has to do with what's essentially a diamond 
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| 144 | inheritance problem. 
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| 145 | In C, `int` converts to `unsigned int` and also `long` "safely"; both convert 
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| 146 | to `unsigned long` safely, and it's possible to chain the conversions to 
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| 147 | convert `int` to `unsigned long`. 
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| 148 | There are two constraints here; one is that the `int` to `unsigned long` 
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| 149 | conversion needs to cost more than the other two (because the types aren't as 
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| 150 | "close" in a very intuitive fashion), and the other is that the system needs a 
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| 151 | way to choose which path to take to get to the destination type. 
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| 152 | Now, a fairly natural solution for this would be to just say "C knows how to 
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| 153 | convert from `int` to `unsigned long`, so we just put in a direct conversion 
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| 154 | and make the compiler smart enough to figure out the costs" - this is the 
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| 155 | approach taken by the existing compipler, but given that in a user-defined 
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| 156 | conversion proposal the users can build an arbitrary graph of conversions, 
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| 157 | this case still needs to be handled. 
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| 158 | 
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| 159 | We can define a preorder over the types by saying that `a <~ b` if there 
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| 160 | exists a chain of conversions from `a` to `b` (see Appendix A for description 
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| 161 | of preorders and related constructs). 
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| 162 | This preorder corresponds roughly to a more usual type-theoretic concept of 
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| 163 | subtyping ("if I can convert `a` to `b`, `a` is a more specific type than 
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| 164 | `b`"); however, since this graph is arbitrary, it may contain cycles, so if 
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| 165 | there is also a path to convert `b` to `a` they are in some sense equivalently 
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| 166 | specific. 
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| 167 | 
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| 168 | Now, to compare the cost of two conversion chains `(s, x1, x2, ... xn)` and 
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| 169 | `(s, y1, y2, ... ym)`, we have both the length of the chains (`n` versus `m`) 
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| 170 | and this conversion preorder over the destination types `xn` and `ym`. 
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| 171 | We could define a preorder by taking chain length and breaking ties by the 
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| 172 | conversion preorder, but this would lead to unexpected behaviour when closing 
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| 173 | diamonds with an arm length of longer than 1. 
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| 174 | Consider a set of types `A`, `B1`, `B2`, `C` with the arcs `A->B1`, `B1->B2`, 
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| 175 | `B2->C`, and `A->C`. 
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| 176 | If we are comparing conversions from `A` to both `B2` and `C`, we expect the 
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| 177 | conversion to `B2` to be chosen because it's the more specific type under the 
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| 178 | conversion preorder, but since its chain length is longer than the conversion 
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| 179 | to `C`, it loses and `C` is chosen. 
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| 180 | However, taking the conversion preorder and breaking ties or ambiguities by 
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| 181 | chain length also doesn't work, because of cases like the following example 
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| 182 | where the transitivity property is broken and we can't find a global maximum: 
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| 183 | 
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| 184 |         `X->Y1->Y2`, `X->Z1->Z2->Z3->W`, `X->W`
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| 185 | 
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| 186 | In this set of arcs, if we're comparing conversions from `X` to each of `Y2`, 
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| 187 | `Z3` and `W`, converting to `Y2` is cheaper than converting to `Z3`, because 
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| 188 | there are no conversions between `Y2` and `Z3`, and `Y2` has the shorter chain 
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| 189 | length. 
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| 190 | Also, comparing conversions from `X` to `Z3` and to `W`, we find that the 
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| 191 | conversion to `Z3` is cheaper, because `Z3 < W` by the conversion preorder, 
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| 192 | and so is considered to be the nearer type. 
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| 193 | By transitivity, then, the conversion from `X` to `Y2` should be cheaper than 
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| 194 | the conversion from `X` to `W`, but in this case the `X` and `W` are 
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| 195 | incomparable by the conversion preorder, so the tie is broken by the shorter 
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| 196 | path from `X` to `W` in favour of `W`, contradicting the transitivity property 
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| 197 | for this proposed order.
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| 198 | 
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| 199 | Without transitivity, we would need to compare all pairs of conversions, which 
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| 200 | would be expensive, and possibly not yield a minimal-cost conversion even if 
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| 201 | all pairs were comparable. 
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| 202 | In short, this ordering is infeasible, and by extension I believe any ordering 
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| 203 | composed solely of single-step conversions between types with no further 
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| 204 | user-supplied information will be insufficiently powerful to express the 
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| 205 | built-in conversions between C's types.
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