[swift-evolution] Enhanced existential types proposal discussion
Thorsten Seitz
tseitz42 at icloud.com
Sun May 29 09:22:34 CDT 2016
> Am 28.05.2016 um 22:04 schrieb Matthew Johnson <matthew at anandabits.com>:
>
>
>> On May 28, 2016, at 2:31 PM, Thorsten Seitz via swift-evolution <swift-evolution at swift.org <mailto:swift-evolution at swift.org>> wrote:
>>
>> I’m not happy with that restriction in the proposal:
>>
>> Existentials cannot be used with generics in the following ways:
>>
>> In generic declarations, with the requirements composed out of generic type variables:
>>
>> // NOT ALLOWED
>> func foo<A, B>(x: A, y: B) -> Any<A, B> { ... }
>>
>> Why is that not allowed?
>>
>> I would have hoped to be able to write something like
>>
>> func union<A, B>(x: Set<A>, y: Set<B>) -> Set<Any<A, B>> { … }
>
> What do you expect to happen when someone writes: `union(Set<Int>(), Set<String>())`?
(I meant `intersection` instead of `union`… see my other response, but for the union case which should result in `Set<A | B>` I would expect Set<Int | String>; for the intersection case I would expect Set<Any<Int, String>> which would be Set<Bottom> or Set<Nothing> in Ceylon, where the bottom type is called `Nothing`).
-Thorsten
>
>>
>>
>> -Thorsten
>>
>>
>>
>>> Am 26.05.2016 um 07:53 schrieb Austin Zheng via swift-evolution <swift-evolution at swift.org <mailto:swift-evolution at swift.org>>:
>>>
>>> The inimitable Joe Groff provided me with an outline as to how the design could be improved. I've taken the liberty of rewriting parts of the proposal to account for his advice.
>>>
>>> It turns out the runtime type system is considerably more powerful than I expected. The previous concept in which protocols with associated types' APIs were vended out selectively and using existentials has been discarded.
>>>
>>> Instead, all the associated types that belong to an existential are accessible as 'anonymous' types within the scope of the existential. These anonymous types are not existentials - they are an anonymous representation of whatever concrete type is satisfying the existential's value's underlying type's associated type.
>>>
>>> This is an enormous step up in power - for example, an existential can return a value of one of these anonymous associated types from one function and pass it into another function that takes the same type, maintaining perfect type safety but without ever revealing the actual type. There is no need anymore to limit the APIs exposed to the user, although there may still exist APIs that are semantically useless without additional type information.
>>>
>>> A set of conversions has also been defined. At compile-time 'as' can be used to turn values of these anonymous associated types back into existentials based on the constraints defined earlier. 'as?' can also be used for conditional casting of these anonymously-typed values into potential actual types.
>>>
>>> As always, the link is here, and feedback would be greatly appreciated: https://github.com/austinzheng/swift-evolution/blob/az-existentials/proposals/XXXX-enhanced-existentials.md <https://github.com/austinzheng/swift-evolution/blob/az-existentials/proposals/XXXX-enhanced-existentials.md>
>>>
>>> Best,
>>> Austin
>>>
>>> On Tue, May 24, 2016 at 5:09 AM, Matthew Johnson via swift-evolution <swift-evolution at swift.org <mailto:swift-evolution at swift.org>> wrote:
>>>
>>>
>>> Sent from my iPad
>>>
>>> On May 23, 2016, at 9:52 PM, Brent Royal-Gordon via swift-evolution <swift-evolution at swift.org <mailto:swift-evolution at swift.org>> wrote:
>>>
>>> >> One initial bit of feedback - I believe if you have existential types, I believe you can define Sequence Element directly, rather than with a type alias. e.g.
>>> >>
>>> >> protocol Sequence {
>>> >> associatedtype Element
>>> >> associatedtype Iterator: any<IteratorProtocol where IteratorProtocol.Element==Element>
>>> >> associatedtype SubSequence: any<Sequence where Sequence.Element == Element>
>>> >> …
>>> >> }
>>> >
>>> > That's not really the same thing. Any<IteratorProtocol> is an existential, not a protocol. It's basically an automatically-generated version of our current `AnyIterator<T>` type (though with some additional flexibility). It can't appear on the right side of a `:`, any more than AnyIterator could.
>>>
>>> After this proposal you should be able to use these existentials anywhere you can place a constraint, so it would work. You can do this with the protocol composition operator today and the future existential is just an extension of that capability.
>>>
>>> >
>>> > What *would* work is allowing `where` clauses on associated types:
>>> >
>>> >> protocol Sequence {
>>> >> associatedtype Element
>>> >> associatedtype Iterator: IteratorProtocol where Iterator.Element==Element
>>> >> associatedtype SubSequence: Sequence where SubSequence.Element == Element
>>> >> …
>>> >> }
>>> >
>>> > I believe this is part of the generics manifesto.
>>> >
>>> > --
>>> > Brent Royal-Gordon
>>> > Architechies
>>> >
>>> > _______________________________________________
>>> > swift-evolution mailing list
>>> > swift-evolution at swift.org <mailto:swift-evolution at swift.org>
>>> > https://lists.swift.org/mailman/listinfo/swift-evolution <https://lists.swift.org/mailman/listinfo/swift-evolution>
>>>
>>> _______________________________________________
>>> swift-evolution mailing list
>>> swift-evolution at swift.org <mailto:swift-evolution at swift.org>
>>> https://lists.swift.org/mailman/listinfo/swift-evolution <https://lists.swift.org/mailman/listinfo/swift-evolution>
>>>
>>> _______________________________________________
>>> swift-evolution mailing list
>>> swift-evolution at swift.org <mailto:swift-evolution at swift.org>
>>> https://lists.swift.org/mailman/listinfo/swift-evolution <https://lists.swift.org/mailman/listinfo/swift-evolution>
>>
>> _______________________________________________
>> swift-evolution mailing list
>> swift-evolution at swift.org <mailto:swift-evolution at swift.org>
>> https://lists.swift.org/mailman/listinfo/swift-evolution
>
-------------- next part --------------
An HTML attachment was scrubbed...
URL: <https://lists.swift.org/pipermail/swift-evolution/attachments/20160529/7288f406/attachment.html>
More information about the swift-evolution
mailing list