A Type Language for Python
==========================

https://github.com/kennknowles/python-typelanguage

This package provides a type language for communicating about Python
programs and values. Humans communicating to other humans, humans
communicating to the computer, and even the computer communicating to
humans (via type inference and run-time contract checking).

This project has a “duck-typed” status: Whatever you can use it for, it
is ready for :-)

Here is a more concrete list of implemented and intended features:

-  *yes* - Definition of a type language.
-  *yes* - Parsing and printing.
-  *yes* - Monitoring of type adherence for monomorphic types.
-  *yes* - “Any” type for easily saying exactly where things get really
   dynamic.
-  *upcoming* - Monitoring of type adherence for polymorphic types.
-  *upcoming* - Generation of constraints between types in a program.
-  *upcoming* - Best-effort inference of suitable types.
-  *upcoming* - Refinement types with hybrid type checking.

The Types
---------

This type language is built from the following concepts:

-  Named types: ``int``, ``long``, ``float``, ``complex``, ``str``,
   ``unicode``, ``file``, ``YourClassNameHere``, …
-  List types: ``[int]``, ``[[long]]``, …
-  Tuple types: ``(int, long)``, ``(float, (int, Regex))``, …
-  Dictionary types: ``{string: float}``,
   ``{ (str, str) : [complex] }``, …
-  Union types ``int|long|float``, ``str|file``, …
-  The “any” type, ``??``, for when a value is too complex to describe
   in this language. May be an indication that a piece of code is
   metaprogramming or should be treated with gradual typing.
-  Function types:

   -  ``str -> int``
   -  ``(int) -> int``
   -  ``(int, int) -> int``
   -  ``( (int, int) ) -> int``
   -  ``( str|file ) -> SomeClass``
   -  ``(int, *[str]) -> [(str, int)]``
   -  ``(int, *[int], **{int: str}) -> str``

-  Object types: ``object(self_type, field1: int, field2: str, ...)``
-  Polymorphic types (where ``~a``, ``~b``, ``~c`` range over any other
   type)

   -  ``~a -> ~a``
   -  ``[~a] -> [~a]``
   -  ``( (~a, ~b) ) -> ~a``

Types as Contracts
------------------

The module ``typelanguage.enforce`` contains functions for using these
types as run-time monitors.

Applied directly:

::

    >>> check('{string: int}', {"hello" : "there"})

More interestingly, automatically protecting a function from bad input,
for example, putting better error checking on Python’s
``unicode``/``str`` interactions.

::

    >>> '\xa3'.encode('utf-8')
    ...
    UnicodeDecodeError: 'ascii' codec can't decode byte 0xa3 in position 0: ordinal not in range(128)

    >>> @guard('unicode -> str')
    ... def safe_encode(s):
    ...    return s.encode('utf-8')

    >>> safe_encode(u'hello')
    'hello'
    >>> safe_encode('\xa3')
    TypeError: Type check failed: ? does not have type unicode

Eventually, the notion of *blame* may be usefully incorporated, for
pointing out which piece of code or agent in a distributed setting is
responsible for the undesirable value.

Type Inference
--------------

In the spirit of Python and dynamic languages, type inference is
best-effort. It works like so:

1. By traversing the code, we can discover a bunch of constraints
   between types in different bits.
2. Some of these constraints are going to be very easy to solve, so we
   can just propagate the results.
3. Some of these constraints are not going to be practical to try to
   solve, so we can just drop them or insert some enforcement code if we
   like.

More to explore
---------------

There are many other projects that check contracts or types for Python
in some way or another, but none makes communication their primary goal,
with the possible exception of pySonar. As such, they make different
design choices. Some are research projects or prototypes – this is not.
This is a library meant for use.

-  `PEP 316 <http://www.python.org/dev/peps/pep-0316/>`_ (deferred)
-  `RPython <http://doc.pypy.org/en/latest/translation.html>`_ and
   `PyPy <http://pypy.org/>`_ (compilation-oriented)
-  `pySonar <http://yinwang0.wordpress.com/2010/09/12/pysonar/>`_ and
   `mini-pysonar <https://github.com/yinwang0/mini-pysonar>`_ (way cool)
-  `Pyntch <http://www.unixuser.org/~euske/python/pyntch/index.html>`_
-  `typechecker <https://github.com/shomah4a/typechecker>`_
-  `pycontract <http://www.wayforward.net/pycontract/>`_
-  `python-dbc <http://code.google.com/p/python-dbc/>`_ and `one
   pyDBC <http://www.nongnu.org/pydbc/>`_ and `another
   pydbc <https://github.com/cadrian/pydbc>`_ and `yet another
   pyDBC <https://github.com/Ceasar/pyDbC>`_
-  `python-type-inference <http://code.google.com/p/python-type-inference/wiki/Resources>`_
   (no code, but has a great list of papers and even more tools)

And since dynamic languages are much of a muchness, it is worthwhile
seeing what is happening elsewhere, though again very few projects
emphasize the types themselves as fun, interesting and useful, only that
the code has them.

-  `Contracts in
   Racket <http://docs.racket-lang.org/guide/contracts.html>`_ and
   `Typed Racket <http://docs.racket-lang.org/ts-guide/>`_
-  `Typescript <http://www.typescriptlang.org/>`_ aka `a slightly
   gradually-typed
   Javascript <http://siek.blogspot.com/2012/10/is-typescript-gradually-typed-part-1.html>`_
   and `Javascript++ <http://jspp.javascript.am/>`_ (sort of
   gradually-typed Javascript) and
   `javascript-contracts <https://github.com/brownplt/javascript-contracts>`_
   and `cerny <http://www.cerny-online.com/cerny.js/>`_
-  `Este <https://github.com/Steida/este>`_ (statically-typed
   coffeescript) and
   `Uberscript <https://github.com/jstrachan/coffee-script/blob/master/TypeAnnotations.md>`_
   (gradually-typed coffeescript) and
   `contracts.coffee <http://disnetdev.com/contracts.coffee/>`_
-  `Contracts.ruby <https://github.com/egonSchiele/contracts.ruby>`_

I’m omitting the billion typed languages that compile to Javascript
because those are just typed languages compiler to the assembly language
of the web.

Finally, if you want to actually grok types, then contracts, then types
and contracts together, then types and dynamic types together, then
*polymorphic* type as contracts and dynamic types together, then type
inference for such systems, try this chronological series of reading.

-  `*Types and Programming
   Languages* <http://www.cis.upenn.edu/~bcpierce/tapl/>`_ by Benjamin
   Pierce.
-  `Contracts for higher-order
   functions <http://www.eecs.northwestern.edu/~robby/pubs/papers/ho-contracts-icfp2002.pdf>`_
   by Robert Bruce Findler & Matthias Felleisen. ICFP 2002.
-  `Hybrid type
   checking <http://users.soe.ucsc.edu/~cormac/papers/toplas09.pdf>`_ by
   Kenneth Knowles & Cormac Flanagan. TOPLAS 2010. (expanded and
   corrected from POPL 2006)
-  `Gradual typing for functional
   languages <http://ecee.colorado.edu/~siek/pubs/pubs/2006/siek06_gradual.pdf>`_
   by Jeremy Siek & Walid Taha. Scheme workshop 2006.
-  `Gradual Typing for
   Objects <http://ecee.colorado.edu/~siek/gradual-obj.pdf>`_ by Jeremy
   Siek and Walid Taha. ECOOP 2007.
-  `Type reconstruction for general refinement
   types <http://users.soe.ucsc.edu/~cormac/papers/esop07.pdf>`_ by
   Kenneth Knowles & Cormac Flanagan. ESOP 2007.
-  `Relationally-parametric polymorphic
   contracts <http://cs.brown.edu/~sk/Publications/Papers/Published/gmfk-rel-par-poly-cont/paper.pdf>`_
   by Arjun Guha, Jacob Matthews, Robert Bruce Findler, and Shriram
   Krishnamurthi. DLS 2007.
-  `Gradual typing with unification based
   inference <http://ecee.colorado.edu/~siek/dls08igtlc.pdf>`_ by Jeremy
   Siek and Manish Vachharajani. DLS 2008.
-  `Blame for
   all <http://homepages.inf.ed.ac.uk/wadler/papers/blame-for-all/blame-for-all.pdf>`_
   by Amal Ahmed, Robert Bruce Findler, Jacob Matthews, and Philip
   Wadler. STOP 2009.
-  `Always available static and dynamic
   feedback <http://homes.cs.washington.edu/~mernst/pubs/ductile-icse2011.pdf>`_
   by Michael Bayne, Richard Cook, and Michael D. Ernst. ICSE 2011.
-  `The ins and outs of of gradual type
   inference <http://www.cs.umd.edu/~avik/papers/iogti.pdf>`_ by Aseem
   Rastogi, Avik Chaudhuri, and Basil Hosmer. POPL 2012.

Contributors
------------

-  `Kenn Knowles <https://github.com/kennknowles>`_
   (`@kennknowles <https://twitter.com/KennKnowles>`_)

Copyright and License
---------------------

Copyright 2012- Kenneth Knowles

Licensed under the Apache License, Version 2.0 (the “License”); you may
not use this file except in compliance with the License. You may obtain
a copy of the License at

::

    http://www.apache.org/licenses/LICENSE-2.0

Unless required by applicable law or agreed to in writing, software
distributed under the License is distributed on an “AS IS” BASIS,
WITHOUT WARRANTIES OR CONDITIONS OF ANY KIND, either express or implied.
See the License for the specific language governing permissions and
limitations under the License.
