| 1 | \chapter{Introduction}
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| 2 |
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| 3 | All types in a programming language have a set of constants (symbols), and these constants represent values, \eg integer types have constants @-1@, @17@, @0xff@ representing whole numbers, floating-point types have constants @5.3@, @2.3E-5@, @0xff.ffp0@ representing real numbers, character types have constants @'a'@, @"abc\n"@, \mbox{\lstinline{u8"}\texttt{\guillemotleft{na\"{i}ve}\guillemotright}\lstinline{"}} representing (human readable) text, \etc.
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| 4 | Constants can be overloaded among types, \eg @0@ is a null pointer for all pointer types, and the value zero for integer and floating-point types.
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| 5 | (In \CFA, the constants @0@ and @1@ can be overloaded for any type.)
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| 6 | A constant's symbolic name is dictated by language syntax related to types, \eg @5.@ (double), @5.0f@ (float), @5l@ (long double).
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| 7 | In general, the representation of a constant's value is \newterm{opaque}, so the internal representation can be chosen arbitrarily.
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| 8 | In theory, there are an infinite set of constant names per type representing an infinite set of values.
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| 9 |
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| 10 | It is common in mathematics, engineering, and computer science to alias new constants to existing constants so they have the same value, \eg $\pi$, $\tau$ (2$\pi$), $\phi$ (golden ratio), K(k), M, G, T for powers of 2\footnote{Overloaded with SI powers of 10.} often prefixing bits (b) or bytes (B), \eg Gb, MB, and in general situations, \eg specific times (noon, New Years), cities (Big Apple), flowers (Lily), \etc.
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| 11 | An alias can bind to another alias, which transitively binds it to the specified constant.
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| 12 | Multiple aliases can represent the same value, \eg eighth note and quaver, giving synonyms.
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| 13 |
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| 14 | Many programming languages capture this important software-engineering capability through a mechanism called \newterm{constant} or \newterm{literal} naming, where a new constant is aliased to an existing constant.
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| 15 | Its purpose is for readability: replacing a constant name that directly represents a value with a name that is more symbolic and meaningful in the context of the program.
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| 16 | Thereafter, changing the aliasing of the new constant to another constant automatically distributes the rebinding, preventing errors.
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| 17 | % and only equality operations are available, \eg @O_RDONLY@, @O_WRONLY@, @O_CREAT@, @O_TRUNC@, @O_APPEND@.
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| 18 | Because an aliased name is a constant, it cannot appear in a mutable context, \eg \mbox{$\pi$ \lstinline{= 42}} is meaningless, and a constant has no address, \ie it is an \newterm{rvalue}\footnote{
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| 19 | The term rvalue defines an expression that can only appear on the right-hand side of an assignment expression.}.
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| 20 | In theory, there are an infinite set of possible aliasing, in practice, the number of aliasing per program is finite and small.
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| 21 |
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| 22 | Aliased constants can form an (ordered) set, \eg days of a week, months of a year, floors of a building (basement, ground, 1st), colours in a rainbow, \etc.
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| 23 | In this case, the binding between a constant name and value can be implicit, where the values are chosen to support any set operations.
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| 24 | Many programming languages capture the aliasing and ordering through a mechanism called an \newterm{enumeration}.
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| 25 | \begin{quote}
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| 26 | enumerate (verb, transitive).
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| 27 | To count, ascertain the number of;
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| 28 | more usually, to mention (a number of things or persons) separately, as if for the purpose of counting;
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| 29 | to specify as in a list or catalogue.~\cite{OEDenumerate}
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| 30 | \end{quote}
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| 31 | Within an enumeration set, the enumeration names (aliases) must be unique, and instances of an enumerated type are \emph{often} restricted to hold only these names.
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| 32 |
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| 33 | It is possible to enumerate among set names without having an ordering among the set values.
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| 34 | For example, the week, the weekdays, the weekend, and every second day of the week.
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| 35 | \begin{cfa}[morekeywords={in}]
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| 36 | for ( cursor in Mon, Tue, Wed, Thu, Fri, Sat, Sun } ... $\C[3.75in]{// week}$
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| 37 | for ( cursor in Mon, Tue, Wed, Thu, Fri } ... $\C{// weekday}$
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| 38 | for ( cursor in Sat, Sun } ... $\C{// weekend}$
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| 39 | for ( cursor in Mon, Wed, Fri, Sun } ... $\C{// every second day of week}\CRT$
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| 40 | \end{cfa}
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| 41 | A set can have a partial or total ordering, making it possible to compare set elements, \eg Monday is before Friday and Friday is after.
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| 42 | Ordering allows iterating among the enumeration set using relational operators and advancement, \eg:
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| 43 | \begin{cfa}
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| 44 | for ( cursor = Monday; cursor @<=@ Friday; cursor = @succ@( cursor ) ) ...
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| 45 | \end{cfa}
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| 46 | Here the values for the set names are logically \emph{generated} rather than listing a subset of names.
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| 47 |
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| 48 | Hence, the fundamental aspects of an enumeration are:
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| 49 | \begin{enumerate}
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| 50 | \item
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| 51 | \begin{sloppypar}
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| 52 | It provides a finite set of new constants, which are implicitly or explicitly assigned values that must be appropriate for any set operations.
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| 53 | This aspect differentiates an enumeration from general types with an infinite set of constants.
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| 54 | \end{sloppypar}
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| 55 | \item
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| 56 | The alias names are constants, which follows transitively from their binding to other constants.
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| 57 | \item
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| 58 | Defines a type for generating instants (variables).
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| 59 | \item
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| 60 | For safety, an enumeration instance should be restricted to hold only its constant names.
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| 61 | \item
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| 62 | There is a mechanism for \emph{enumerating} over the enumeration names, where the ordering can be implicit from the type, explicitly listed, or generated arithmetically.
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| 63 | \end{enumerate}
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| 64 |
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| 65 |
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| 66 | \section{Terminology}
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| 67 | \label{s:Terminology}
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| 68 |
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| 69 | The term \newterm{enumeration} defines a type with a set of new constants, and the term \newterm{enumerator} represents an arbitrary alias name \see{\VRef{s:CEnumeration} for the name derivations}.
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| 70 | An enumerated type can have three fundamental properties, \newterm{label} (name), \newterm{order} (position), and \newterm{value} (payload).
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| 71 | \begin{cquote}
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| 72 | \sf\setlength{\tabcolsep}{3pt}
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| 73 | \begin{tabular}{rcccccccr}
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| 74 | \it\color{red}enumeration & \multicolumn{8}{c}{\it\color{red}enumerators} \\
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| 75 | $\downarrow$\hspace*{15pt} & \multicolumn{8}{c}{$\downarrow$} \\
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| 76 | @enum@ Week \{ & Mon, & Tue, & Wed, & Thu, & Fri, & Sat, & Sun {\color{red}= 42} & \}; \\
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| 77 | \it\color{red}label & Mon & Tue & Wed & Thu & Fri & Sat & Sun & \\
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| 78 | \it\color{red}order & 0 & 1 & 2 & 3 & 4 & 5 & 6 & \\
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| 79 | \it\color{red}value & 0 & 1 & 2 & 3 & 4 & 5 & {\color{red}42} &
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| 80 | \end{tabular}
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| 81 | \end{cquote}
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| 82 | Here, the enumeration @Week@ defines the enumerator constants @Mon@, @Tue@, @Wed@, @Thu@, @Fri@, @Sat@, and @Sun@.
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| 83 | The implicit ordering implies the successor of @Tue@ is @Mon@ and the predecessor of @Tue@ is @Wed@, independent of any associated enumerator values.
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| 84 | The value is the implicitly/explicitly assigned constant to support any enumeration operations;
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| 85 | the value may be hidden (opaque) or visible.
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| 86 |
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| 87 | Specifying complex ordering is possible:
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| 88 | \begin{cfa}
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| 89 | enum E1 { $\color{red}[\(_1\)$ {A, B}, $\color{blue}[\(_2\)$ C $\color{red}]\(_1\)$, {D, E} $\color{blue}]\(_2\)$ }; $\C{// overlapping square brackets}$
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| 90 | enum E2 { {A, {B, C} }, { {D, E}, F }; $\C{// nesting}$
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| 91 | \end{cfa}
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| 92 | For @E1@, there is the partial ordering among @A@, @B@ and @C@, and @C@, @D@ and @E@, but not among @A@, @B@ and @D@, @E@.
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| 93 | For @E2@, there is the total ordering @A@ $<$ @{B, C}@ $<$ @{D, E}@ $<$ @F@.
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| 94 | Only flat total-ordering among enumerators is considered in this work.
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| 95 |
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| 96 |
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| 97 | \section{Motivation}
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| 98 |
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| 99 | Many programming languages provide an enumeration-like mechanism, which may or may not cover the previous five fundamental enumeration aspects.
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| 100 | Hence, the term \emph{enumeration} can be confusing and misunderstood.
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| 101 | Furthermore, some languages conjoin the enumeration with other type features, making it difficult to tease apart which feature is being used.
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| 102 | This section discusses some language features that are sometimes called an enumeration but do not provide all enumeration aspects.
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| 103 |
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| 104 |
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| 105 | \subsection{Aliasing}
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| 106 | \label{s:Aliasing}
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| 107 |
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| 108 | Some languages provide simple aliasing (renaming), \eg:
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| 109 | \begin{cfa}
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| 110 | const Size = 20, Pi = 3.14159, Name = "Jane";
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| 111 | \end{cfa}
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| 112 | The alias name is logically replaced in the program text by its matching constant.
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| 113 | It is possible to compare aliases, if the constants allow it, \eg @Size < Pi@, whereas @Pi < Name@ might be disallowed depending on the language.
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| 114 |
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| 115 | Aliasing is not macro substitution, \eg @#define Size 20@, where a name is replaced by its value \emph{before} compilation, so the name is invisible to the programming language.
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| 116 | With aliasing, each new name is part of the language, and hence, participates fully, such as name overloading in the type system.
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| 117 | Aliasing is not an immutable variable, \eg:
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| 118 | \begin{cfa}
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| 119 | extern @const@ int Size = 20;
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| 120 | extern void foo( @const@ int @&@ size );
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| 121 | foo( Size ); // take the address of (reference) Size
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| 122 | \end{cfa}
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| 123 | Taking the address of an immutable variable makes it an \newterm{lvalue}, which implies it has storage.
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| 124 | With separate compilation, it is necessary to choose one translation unit to perform the initialization.
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| 125 | If aliasing does require storage, its address and initialization are opaque (compiler only), similar to \CC rvalue reference @&&@.
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| 126 |
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| 127 | Aliasing does provide readability and automatic resubstitution.
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| 128 | It also provides simple enumeration properties, but with effort.
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| 129 | \begin{cfa}
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| 130 | const Mon = 1, Tue = 2, Wed = 3, Thu = 4, Fri = 5, Sat = 6, Sun = 7;
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| 131 | \end{cfa}
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| 132 | Any reordering of the enumerators requires manual renumbering.
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| 133 | \begin{cfa}
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| 134 | const @Sun = 1@, Mon = 2, Tue = 3, Wed = 4, Thu = 5, Fri = 6, Sat = 7;
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| 135 | \end{cfa}
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| 136 | For these reasons, aliasing is sometimes called an enumeration.
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| 137 | However, there is no type to create a type-checked instance or iterator cursor, so there is no ability for enumerating.
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| 138 | Hence, there are multiple enumeration aspects not provided by aliasing, justifying a separate enumeration type in a programming language.
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| 139 |
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| 140 |
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| 141 | \subsection{Algebraic Data Type}
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| 142 | \label{s:AlgebraicDataType}
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| 143 |
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| 144 | An algebraic data type (ADT)\footnote{ADT is overloaded with abstract data type.} is another language feature often linked with enumeration, where an ADT conjoins an arbitrary type, possibly a \lstinline[language=C++]{class} or @union@, and a named constructor.
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| 145 | For example, in Haskell:
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| 146 | \begin{haskell}
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| 147 | data S = S { i::Int, d::Double } $\C{// structure}$
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| 148 | data @Foo@ = A Int | B Double | C S $\C{// ADT, composed of three types}$
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| 149 | foo = A 3; $\C{// type Foo is inferred}$
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| 150 | bar = B 3.5
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| 151 | baz = C S{ i = 7, d = 7.5 }
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| 152 | \end{haskell}
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| 153 | the ADT has three variants (constructors), @A@, @B@, @C@ with associated types @Int@, @Double@, and @S@.
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| 154 | The constructors create an initialized value of the specific type that is bound to the immutable variables @foo@, @bar@, and @baz@.
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| 155 | Hence, the ADT @Foo@ is like a union containing values of the associated types, and a constructor name is used to intialize and access the value using dynamic pattern-matching.
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| 156 | \begin{cquote}
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| 157 | \setlength{\tabcolsep}{15pt}
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| 158 | \begin{tabular}{@{}ll@{}}
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| 159 | \begin{haskell}
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| 160 | prtfoo val = -- function
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| 161 | -- pattern match on constructor
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| 162 | case val of
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| 163 | @A@ a -> print a
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| 164 | @B@ b -> print b
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| 165 | @C@ (S i d) -> do
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| 166 | print i
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| 167 | print d
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| 168 | \end{haskell}
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| 169 | &
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| 170 | \begin{haskell}
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| 171 | main = do
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| 172 | prtfoo foo
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| 173 | prtfoo bar
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| 174 | prtfoo baz
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| 175 | 3
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| 176 | 3.5
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| 177 | 7
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| 178 | 7.5
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| 179 | \end{haskell}
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| 180 | \end{tabular}
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| 181 | \end{cquote}
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| 182 | For safety, most languages require all associated types to be listed or a default case with no field accesses.
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| 183 |
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| 184 | A less frequent case is multiple constructors with the same type.
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| 185 | \begin{haskell}
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| 186 | data Bar = X Int | Y Int | Z Int;
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| 187 | foo = X 3;
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| 188 | bar = Y 3;
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| 189 | baz = Z 5;
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| 190 | \end{haskell}
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| 191 | Here, the constructor name gives different meaning to the values in the common \lstinline[language=Haskell]{Int} type, \eg the value @3@ has different interpretations depending on the constructor name in the pattern matching.
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| 192 |
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| 193 | Note, the term \newterm{variant} is often associated with ADTs.
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| 194 | However, there are multiple languages with a @variant@ type that is not an ADT \see{Algol68~\cite{Algol68} or \CC \lstinline{variant}}.
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| 195 | In these languages, the variant is often a union using RTTI tags for discrimination, which cannot be used to simulate an enumeration.
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| 196 | Hence, in this work the term variant is not a synonym for ADT.
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| 197 |
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| 198 | % https://downloads.haskell.org/ghc/latest/docs/libraries/base-4.19.1.0-179c/GHC-Enum.html
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| 199 | % https://hackage.haskell.org/package/base-4.19.1.0/docs/GHC-Enum.html
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| 200 |
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| 201 | The association between ADT and enumeration occurs if all the constructors have a unit (empty) type, \eg @struct unit {}@.
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| 202 | Note, the unit type is not the same as \lstinline{void}, \eg:
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| 203 | \begin{cfa}
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| 204 | void foo( void );
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| 205 | struct unit {} u; $\C[1.5in]{// empty type}$
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| 206 | unit bar( unit );
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| 207 | foo( foo() ); $\C{// void argument does not match with void parameter}$
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| 208 | bar( bar( u ) ); $\C{// unit argument does match with unit parameter}\CRT$
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| 209 | \end{cfa}
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| 210 |
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| 211 | For example, in the Haskell ADT:
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| 212 | \begin{haskell}
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| 213 | data Week = Mon | Tue | Wed | Thu | Fri | Sat | Sun deriving(Enum, Eq, Show)
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| 214 | \end{haskell}
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| 215 | the default type for each constructor is the unit type, and deriving from @Enum@ enforces no other associated types, @Eq@ allows equality comparison, and @Show@ is for printing.
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| 216 | The nullary constructors for the unit types are numbered left-to-right from $0$ to @maxBound@$- 1$, and provides enumerating operations @succ@, @pred@, @enumFrom@ @enumFromTo@.
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| 217 | \VRef[Figure]{f:HaskellEnumeration} shows enumeration comparison and iterating (enumerating).
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| 218 |
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| 219 | \begin{figure}
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| 220 | \begin{cquote}
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| 221 | \setlength{\tabcolsep}{15pt}
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| 222 | \begin{tabular}{@{}ll@{}}
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| 223 | \begin{haskell}
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| 224 | day = Tue
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| 225 | main = do
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| 226 | if day == Tue then
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| 227 | print day
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| 228 | else
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| 229 | putStr "not Tue"
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| 230 | print (enumFrom Mon) -- week
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| 231 | print (enumFromTo Mon Fri) -- weekday
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| 232 | print (enumFromTo Sat Sun) -- weekend
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| 233 | \end{haskell}
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| 234 | &
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| 235 | \begin{haskell}
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| 236 | Tue
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| 237 | [Mon,Tue,Wed,Thu,Fri,Sat,Sun]
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| 238 | [Mon,Tue,Wed,Thu,Fri]
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| 239 | [Sat,Sun]
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| 240 |
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| 241 |
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| 242 |
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| 243 |
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| 244 |
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| 245 | \end{haskell}
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| 246 | \end{tabular}
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| 247 | \end{cquote}
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| 248 | \caption{Haskell Enumeration}
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| 249 | \label{f:HaskellEnumeration}
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| 250 | \end{figure}
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| 251 |
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| 252 | The key observation is the dichotomy between an ADT and enumeration: the ADT uses the associated type resulting in a union-like data structure, and the enumeration does not use the associated type, and hence, is not a union.
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| 253 | While an enumeration is constructed using the ADT mechanism, it is so restricted it is not an ADT.
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| 254 | Furthermore, a general ADT cannot be an enumeration because the constructors generate different values making enumerating meaningless.
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| 255 | While functional programming languages regularly repurpose the ADT type into an enumeration type, this process seems contrived and confusing.
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| 256 | Hence, there is only a weak equivalence between an enumeration and ADT, justifying a separate enumeration type in a programming language.
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| 257 |
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| 258 |
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| 259 | \section{Contributions}
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| 260 |
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| 261 | The goal of this work is to to extend the simple and unsafe enumeration type in the C programming-language into a complex and safe enumeration type in the \CFA programming-language, while maintaining backwards compatibility with C.
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| 262 | On the surface, enumerations seem like a simple type.
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| 263 | However, when extended with advanced features, enumerations become complex for both the type system and the runtime implementation.
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| 264 |
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| 265 | The contribution of this work are:
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| 266 | \begin{enumerate}
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| 267 | \item
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| 268 | overloading
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| 269 | \item
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| 270 | scoping
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| 271 | \item
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| 272 | typing
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| 273 | \item
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| 274 | subseting
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| 275 | \item
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| 276 | inheritance
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| 277 | \end{enumerate}
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| 278 |
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| 279 |
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| 280 | \begin{comment}
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| 281 | Date: Wed, 1 May 2024 13:41:58 -0400
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| 282 | Subject: Re: Enumeration
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| 283 | To: "Peter A. Buhr" <pabuhr@uwaterloo.ca>
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| 284 | From: Gregor Richards <gregor.richards@uwaterloo.ca>
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| 285 |
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| 286 | I think I have only one comment and one philosophical quibble to make:
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| 287 |
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| 288 | Comment: I really can't agree with putting MB in the same category as the
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| 289 | others. MB is both a quantity and a unit, and the suggestion that MB *is* one
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| 290 | million evokes the rather disgusting comparison 1MB = 1000km. Unit types are
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| 291 | not in the scope of this work.
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| 292 |
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| 293 | Philosophical quibble: Pi *is* 3.14159...etc. Monday is not 0; associating
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| 294 | Monday with 0 is just a consequence of the language. The way this is written
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| 295 | suggests that the intentional part is subordinate to the implementation detail,
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| 296 | which seems backwards to me. Calling the number "primary" and the name
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| 297 | "secondary" feels like you're looking out from inside of the compiler, instead
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| 298 | of looking at the language from the outside. And, calling secondary values
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| 299 | without visible primary values "opaque"-which yes, I realize is my own term
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| 300 | ;)-suggests that you insist that the primary value is a part of the design, or
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| 301 | at least mental model, of the program. Although as a practical matter there is
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| 302 | some system value associated with the constructor/tag of an ADT, that value is
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| 303 | not part of the mental model, and so calling it "primary" and calling the name
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| 304 | "secondary" and "opaque" seems either (a) very odd or (b) very C-biased. Or
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| 305 | both.
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| 306 |
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| 307 | With valediction,
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| 308 | - Gregor Richards
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| 309 |
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| 310 |
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| 311 | Date: Thu, 30 May 2024 23:15:23 -0400
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| 312 | Subject: Re: Meaning?
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| 313 | To: "Peter A. Buhr" <pabuhr@uwaterloo.ca>
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| 314 | CC: <ajbeach@uwaterloo.ca>, <j82liang@uwaterloo.ca>
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| 315 | From: Gregor Richards <gregor.richards@uwaterloo.ca>
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| 316 |
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| 317 | I have to disagree with this being agreeing to disagree, since we agree
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| 318 | here. My core point was that it doesn't matter whether you enumerate over the
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| 319 | names or the values. This is a distinction without a difference in any case
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| 320 | that matters. If any of the various ways of looking at it are actually
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| 321 | different from each other, then that's because the enumeration has failed to be
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| 322 | an enumeration in some other way, not because of the actual process of
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| 323 | enumeration. Your flag enum is a 1-to-1 map of names and values, so whether you
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| 324 | walk through names or walk through values is not an actual distinction. It
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| 325 | could be distinct in the *order* that it walks through, but that doesn't
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| 326 | actually matter, it's just a choice that has to be made. Walking through entire
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| 327 | range of machine values, including ones that aren't part of the enumeration,
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| 328 | would be bizarre in any case.
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| 329 |
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| 330 | Writing these out has crystallized some thoughts, albeit perhaps not in a way
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| 331 | that's any help to y'all. An enumeration is a set of names; ideally an ordered
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| 332 | set of names. The state of enumerations in programming languages muddies things
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| 333 | because they often expose the machine value underlying those names, resulting
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| 334 | in a possibly ordered set of names and a definitely ordered set of values. And,
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| 335 | muddying things further, because those underlying values are exposed, enums are
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| 336 | used in ways that *depend* on the underlying values being exposed, making that
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| 337 | a part of the definition. But, an enumeration is conceptually just *one* set,
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| 338 | not both. So much of the difficulty is that you're trying to find a way to make
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| 339 | a concept that should be a single set agree with an implementation that's two
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| 340 | sets. If those sets have a 1-to-1 mapping, then who cares, they're just
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| 341 | aliases. It's the possibility of the map being surjective (having multiple
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| 342 | names for the same underlying values) that breaks everything. Personally, I
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| 343 | think that an enum with aliases isn't an enumeration anyway, so who cares about
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| 344 | the rest; if you're not wearing the gourd as a shoe, then it's not an
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| 345 | enumeration.
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| 346 |
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| 347 | With valediction,
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| 348 | - Gregor Richards
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| 349 | \end{comment}
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