Plotkin suggested to use a polymorphic dual intuitionistic/linear type theory as a metalanguage for parametric polymorphism and recursion. In recent work the first two authors and R.L. Petersen have defined a notion of parametric LAPL-structure, which are models of the theory suggested by Plotkin, and in which one can reason using parametricity, solving, for instance, a large class of domain equations. In this paper, we show how an interpretation of a strict version of Bierman, Pitts and Russo’s language Lily into synthetic domain theory presented by Simpson and Rosolini gives rise to a parametric LAPL-structure. This adds to the evidence that the notion of LAPL-structure is a general notion, suitable for treating many different parametric models, and it provides formal proofs of consequences of parametricity expected to hold for the interpretation. Finally, we show how these results, in combination with Rosolini and Simpson’s computational adequacy result, can be used to prove consequences of parametricity for Lily. In particular, we show that one can solve domain equations in Lily up to ground contextual equivalence.

Synthetic domain theory and models of linear Abadi-Plotkin logic

ROSOLINI, GIUSEPPE
2008-01-01

Abstract

Plotkin suggested to use a polymorphic dual intuitionistic/linear type theory as a metalanguage for parametric polymorphism and recursion. In recent work the first two authors and R.L. Petersen have defined a notion of parametric LAPL-structure, which are models of the theory suggested by Plotkin, and in which one can reason using parametricity, solving, for instance, a large class of domain equations. In this paper, we show how an interpretation of a strict version of Bierman, Pitts and Russo’s language Lily into synthetic domain theory presented by Simpson and Rosolini gives rise to a parametric LAPL-structure. This adds to the evidence that the notion of LAPL-structure is a general notion, suitable for treating many different parametric models, and it provides formal proofs of consequences of parametricity expected to hold for the interpretation. Finally, we show how these results, in combination with Rosolini and Simpson’s computational adequacy result, can be used to prove consequences of parametricity for Lily. In particular, we show that one can solve domain equations in Lily up to ground contextual equivalence.
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Utilizza questo identificativo per citare o creare un link a questo documento: https://hdl.handle.net/11567/294137
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