Type erasure
In programming languages, type erasure is the load-time process by which explicit type annotations are removed from a program, before it is executed at run-time. Operational semantics not requiring programs to be accompanied by types are named type-erasure semantics, in contrast with type-passing semantics. Type-erasure semantics is an abstraction principle, ensuring that the run-time execution of a program doesn't depend on type information. In the context of generic programming, the opposite of type erasure is named reification.[1]
Type inference
[edit]The reverse operation is named type inference. Though type erasure can be an easy way to define typing over implicitly typed languages (an implicitly typed term is well-typed if and only if it is the erasure of a well-typed explicitly typed lambda term), it doesn't provide Rule of inference for this definition.
See also
[edit]References
[edit]- ^ Langer, Angelika. "What is reification?".
- Crary, Karl; Weirich, Stephanie; Morrisett, Greg (2002). "Intensional Polymorphism in Type-Erasure Semantics". Journal of Functional Programming. 12 (6): 567–600. CiteSeerX 10.1.1.5.4507. doi:10.1017/S0956796801004282.