Language Independent Traversals For Program Transformation

Stratego -- Strategies for Program Transformation
Language Independent Traversals for Program Transformation. EelcoVisser. Workshop on GenericProgramming (WGP'00), July 2000. Ponte de Lima, Portugal. ps

Abstract

Many language processing operations have a generic underlying algorithm. However, these generic algorithms either have to be implemented specifically for the language under consideration or the language needs to be encoded in a generic format that the generic algorithm works on. Stratego is a language for program transformation that supports both specific and generic views of data types.

A Stratego program defines a transformation on first-order ground terms. Transformation rules define single transformation steps. Transformation rules are combined into transformation strategies by means of combinators that determine where and in what order rules are applied. These combinators include: primitives for traversal to the direct subterms of a node, allowing the definition of many kinds of full term traversals; full control over recursion in traversals; patterns as first-class citizens; generic term construction and deconstruction.

These features create a setting in which it is possible to combine generic traversal with data type specific pattern matching, and separating logic (transformation, pattern matching) from control (traversal). This makes it possible to give language independent descriptions of language processing operations that can be instantiated to a specific language by providing the patterns of the relevant constructs. These generic algorithms only touch relevant constructors and do not need to know the entire datatype, making the algorithms insensitive to changes in the abstract syntax that do not affect the constructors relevant to the operation.

Stratego is currently implemented by compilation to C code. All constructs of the language are implemented directly, i.e., the compiled program is as large as the specification, in contrast to approaches that rely on preprocessing or program generation which may have a scaling problem when dealing with large languages.

The approach to generic programming in Stratego is illustrated by means of several examples including free variable extraction, bound variable renaming, substitution and syntactic unification.


CategoryPaper | -- EelcoVisser - 14 May 2001