# lib-laddertypes Rust Implementation of Ladder-Types (parsing, unification, rewriting, etc)
## Ladder Types In order to implement complex datastructures and algorithms, usually many layers of abstraction are built ontop of each other, and consequently higher-level data types are encoded into lower-level data types, forming a chain of embeddings from concept to `rock bottom' of byte streams. While a high-level type makes claims about an objects semantics, it is ambiguous in regard to its concrete syntactical representation or memory layout. However these concrete representational forms must be compatible for type-safe compositions. For example in the unix shell, many different tools & utilities exist concurrently and depending on the application domain, each will potentially make use of different representational forms. Abstract concepts like 'natural number' could exist in many representational forms, e.g. with variation over radices, endianness, digit encoding etc. Intuitively, *ladder types* provide a way to distinguish between multiple *concrete representations* of the same *abstract / conceptual type*, by capturing the *represented-as* of layered data formats in the structure of type-terms. Formally, we introduce a new type constructor, called the *ladder type*, written `T1 ~ T2`, where `T1` and `T2` are types. The type-term `T1 ~ T2` then expresses the abstract type of `T1` being represented in terms of the concrete type `T2`, which can be read by "`T1` represented as `T2`". #### Example The following type describes a colon-separated sequence of timepoints, each represented as unix-timestamp written as decimal number in big-endian, encoded as UTF-8 string. ``` ~ ~ℕ ~ ~~Char>> ~ ~ ~UTF-8 ~ ``` An object that fits the format described by this type could look like this: ``` 1696093021:1696093039:1528324679:1539892301:1638141920:1688010253 ``` ## How to use this crate ```rust use laddertypes::*; fn main() { let mut dict = TypeDict::new(); let t1 = dict.parse("").expect("couldnt parse typeterm"); let t2 = dict.parse("< C>").expect("couldnt parse typeterm"); assert_eq!( t1.clone().curry(), t2 ); assert_eq!( t1, t2.clone().decurry() ); } ``` ## License [GPLv3](COPYING)