AndreasLoow / plt-errata

Collection of errata for book Aarne Ranta, Implementing Programming Languages

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plt-errata

Collection of errata for book Aarne Ranta, Implementing Programming Languages http://www1.digitalgrammars.com/ipl-book/

To add a new erratum, create an issue or pull request. Please use github markdown syntax and adhere to the style of this page. I will then add the erratum below.

Known errata

This includes the errata listed on http://www1.digitalgrammars.com/ipl-book/

Chapter 1, Compilation Phases

p. 10 (and also later): it is stated that Python is an untyped language. By this we mean that Python has no compile-time type checking. But it does have a run-time notion of types, known as dynamic typing.

Chapter 2, Grammars

p. 25: last line: show (interpret e) should be show (eval e).

p. 27: too many classes in the Java example have the name EAdd. Should be EAdd, ESub, EMul, EDiv.

Chapter 3, Lexing and Parsing

p. 41: The Empty construction could be simplified, by making the initial state final and saving the ε-transition.

p. 41: The Sequence construction can be simplified by using the initial state of the first automaton as initial state of the sequence and the final state of the second automaton as the final state of the sequence. This saves 2 ε-transitions (and would correspond to the example on p. 43).

p. 43: This NFA is not generated by the algorithm on p. 41. It misses ε-transitions. On both pathes, there should be 5 ε-transitions, as 2 are generated by the Union and 3 by the Sequence construction.

p. 43: The result of the subset construction should have 0,1,5 as initial state instead of just 0. Again on p. 44.

p. 46: The figure should say m b's and n b's on the arcs going to the final states (instead of m a's and n a's).

p. 53: The line with %start_pExp should be deleted from the table (or explained). It is rather confusing than helpful.

Chapter 4, Type Checking

4.7 The validity of statements and function definitions

The judgement for checking statements should be formulated as

  Γ ⊢ s ⇒ Γ'

Declarations such as int x; extend the typing context. This would allow to define checking of a sequence of statements in the natural way. Actually the Haskell implementation in 4.11 does it exactly like I suggest here.

4.9 would have to be rewritten. What is going on in 4.9 currently is that the state monad formulation Γ ⊢ s ⇒ Γ' is replaced by a context monad formulation Γ ⊢ ss valid at the cost of modularity: we can only handle statement sequences.

4.8 Declarations and block structures

This section should discuss the scopes for if and while (see errata for Section 5.3).

4.10 Annotating type checkers

p. 69: the pseudo-code for infer(Γ,a+b) is wrong in that it removes the annotations from the subexpressions of the addition expression. The correct return statement would be

  return [['a : t] + ['b : t] : t]

p. 70: the pseudo-code for infer(Γ,a+b) has the same problem as on p. 69

4.11 Type checker in Haskell

p. 73: in checkExp code, if (typ2 = typ) should be if typ2 == typ. It could also be written as

  unless (typ2 == typ) $ fail $
    "type of " ++ ...

In checkStm, there are several errors. The correct code is:

checkStm :: Env -> Stm -> Err Env
checkStm env s = case s of
  SExp exp -> do
    inferExp env exp
    return env
  SDecl typ x ->
    updateVar env x typ
  SWhile exp stm -> do
    checkExp env Type_bool exp
    checkStm (newBlock env) stm
    return env

p. 74, lines 1-3: Use s instead of x as variable name for statement.

Chapter 5, Interpreters

p. 82: Rule γ ⊢ x ⇓ v: The v is type-set in the wrong font.

5.3 Statements

It is not clear how the statement interpreter γ ⊢ s ⇓ γ' would deal with return statements which are not at the end of the function (or break statements in while loops). I suggest to change it to

  γ ⊢ s ⇓ ⟨r,γ'⟩

where r ::= continue | return v is the result of the statement: usually continue, but return v for a return statement. The execution of sequencing of statements will discard the rest of the statments once the result is return v.

p. 84: The specified interpreter gives the wrong result for

  int x = 0;
  int y = 0;
  while (x++ < 1) int y = 1;
  return y;

It gives 1, while the correct result is 0. The problem is that the body of the while will overwrite the value of the shadowed y. To fix this, the body of a while has to be treated as if in its own block.

See http://www.open-std.org/jtc1/sc22/wg14/www/docs/n1256.pdf

An iteration statement is a block whose scope is a strict subset of the scope of its enclosing block. The loop body is also a block whose scope is a strict subset of the scope of the iteration statement. (Section 6.8.5, sentence 5, page number 135, absolute page 147)

Possible fix: replace premise γ′ ⊢ s ⇓ γ″ by γ′. ⊢ s ⇓ γ″.γ₀ in the first rule for while.

if has to be fixed in a similar way, see section 6.8.4, sentence 3.

  int y = 0;
  if (1) int y = 1; else int y = 2;
  return y;

This should return 0, but the current interpreter will return 1.

Possible fix: replace premise γ′ ⊢ s ⇓ γ″ by γ′. ⊢ s ⇓ γ″.γ₀ in the first rule for if. Analogously for the second rule.

5.7 Interpreting Java bytecode

p. 92: in the last rule for ifeq L, the code pointer should become P+1 when v != 0

Chapter 6, Code generation

p. 108: there is a &lt; in the class file template which should just be <.

p. 112: "just a dummy Object". Now, Java has class Void for that purpose. Change would affect the following code.

Chapter 7, Functional programming languages

7.9 Polymorphic type checking with unification

p. 142: in infer(f,a): before infer(a), substitution γ₁ has to be applied to the typing context.

Chapter 8, The language design space

p. 170: the lin rules for TAll and TAny generate a bogus condition. The proper rules are:

    TAll kind = parenth ("\\p -> and [p x | x <-" ++ kind ++ "]") ;
    TAny kind = parenth ("\\p -> or  [p x | x <-" ++ kind ++ "]") ;

Appendix A

p. 175: The arcs in this diagram are not really traceable.

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Collection of errata for book Aarne Ranta, Implementing Programming Languages