Skip to main content
Types in Compilation: Third International Workshop, Tic 2000, Montreal, Canada, September 21, 2000. Revised Selected Papers (Lecture Notes in Computer Science #2071)

Types in Compilation: Third International Workshop, Tic 2000, Montreal, Canada, September 21, 2000. Revised Selected Papers (Lecture Notes in Computer Science #2071)

Current price: $54.99
This product is not returnable.
Publication Date: June 20th, 2001
Publisher:
Springer
ISBN:
9783540421962
Pages:
214
Usually Ships in 1 to 5 Days

Description

The importance of typed languages for building robust software systems is, by now, an undisputed fact. Years of research have led to languages with richly expressive, yet easy to use, type systems for high-level programming languages. Types provide not only a conceptual framework for language designers, but also a ord positive bene ts to the programmer, principally the ability to express and enforce levels of abstraction within a program. Early compilers for typed languages followed closely the methods used for their untyped counterparts. The role of types was limited to the earliest s- ges of compilation, and they were thereafter ignored during the remainder of the translation process. More recently, however, implementors have come to - cognize the importance of types during compilation and even for object code. Several advantages of types in compilation have been noted to date: { They support self-checking by the compiler. By tracking types during c- pilation it is possible for an internal type checker to detect translation errors at an early stage, greatly facilitating compiler development. { They support certi cation of object code. By extending types to the ge- rated object code, it becomes possible for a code user to ensure the basic integrity of that code by checking its type consistency before execution. { They support optimized data representations and calling conventions, even in the presence of modularity. By passing types at compile-, link-, and even run-time, it is possible to avoid compromises of data representation imposed by untyped compilation techniques.