Michael Arntzenius

1paper

1 Paper

19.2PLApr 28
Finite Functional Programming

Michael Arntzenius, Max Willsey

We unify functional and logic programming by treating predicatesas functions equipped with their support: the set of inputs whose output is nonzero. Datalog, for instance, is a language of finitely supported boolean functions. Finite support allows representing functions as input-output tables. Generalizing from boolean functions to other pointed sets neatly handles aggregation and weighted logic programming. We refer to the combination of finitely supported functions, represented as data, with higher order functions, represented as code, as finite functional programming. We give a simple type system to check finite support, using graded effects to check variable grounding and relevance types to model pointed sets.