>Futhark supports a fairly conventional Python-like notation for array slices, namely a[i:j]. This does not have such a simple correspondence with function application syntax.
I don't get it. How is that not trivial with something like
array·slice(from: initial, to: juncture)
Which is not much different from a·/(i,j) when one want to play the monograph game instead. It can be further reduced to a/(i,j) taking from granted that "/" is given special treatment so it can be employed as part of identifiers.I remember I got a little confused when I was first learning TLA+, because what you normally call "functions" are "operators" [1], and what you'd normally call "maps" or "lists" are called "functions".
It was odd to me, because it hadn't really occurred to me before that, given infinite memory (and within a mathematical framework), there's fundamentally not necessarily a difference between a "list" and a "function". With pure functions, you could in "theoretical-land", replace any "function" with an array, where the "argument" is replaced with an index.
And it makes sense to me now; TLA+ functions can be defined like maps or lists, but they can also be defined in terms of operations to create the values in the function. For example, you could define the first N factorials like
Fact == <<1, 2, 6, 24, 120>>
or like this: Fact[n \in Nat] ==
IF n = 0 THEN 1
ELSE n * Fact[n - 1]
in both cases, if you wanted to get the factorial of 5, you'd call Fact[5], and that's on purpose because ultimately from TLA+'s perspective they are equivalent.[1] At least sort of; they superficially look like functions but they're closer to hygienic macros.
No, not in a programming language sense, because arrays are a notation for address offsetting, whereas functions change the execution context of the machine, which is critical to processing performance (think Horner's method).
Not even in a functional sense because, even though functions are input-output maps we define, the inputs are dimensionally rich, it's nowhere close to equivalent to jerry rig a contiguous input space for that purpose.
This is one of those rare times when I read something coming our of the FP community and go "oh, you mean iterators, we've had those for decades over here in imperative-programming land"
In Clojure, vectors literally are functions. You can supply a vector (~= array) or map any place that a single parameter function is expected. So for example:
(map v [4 5 7])
Would return you a list of the items at index 4, 5, and 7 in the vector v.Can you? Yes, and TFA demonstrates this quite clearly.
Should you?
This is where I'd be more careful. Maybe it makes sense to some of the langs in TFA. But it reminds me of [named]tuples in Python, which are iterable, but when used as tuples, in particular, as heterogeneous arrays¹ to support returning multiple values or a quick and dirty product type (/struct), the ability to iterate is just a problem. Doing so is almost always a bug, because iteration through a such tuple is nigh always nonsensical.
So, can an array also be f(index) -> T? Sure. But does that make sense in enough context, or does it promote more bugs and less clear code is what I'd be thinking hard about before I implemented such a thing.
¹sometimes tuples are used as an immutable homogeneous array, and that case is different; iteration is clearly sane, then
I think a more interesting extension would be to see objects as functions. An object maps a set of keys to values. In most languages those keys must be strings. But I don't see why they couldn't be anything. For instance a key could be a function, and to access the value of such a key you would need to pass in exactly that function like this:
let v = myObject [ myFunk ];
Like with arrays-as-functions, the domain of the object-as-function would be its existing keys. Or we could say the domain is any possible value, with the assumption that value of keys which are not stored in the object is always null.Whether new keys could be added at runtime or not is a sepearate question.
It should be easy to extend the syntax so that
myObject (anything) === myObject [anything]
whether myObject is an object, or a 'function' defined with traditional syntax.The definition of a function is that for any given input A, I give you an output B. In fact anything that encodes a kind of transformation and yield new information based an input could be seen as a function. From that point of view, array is a function that when "touched", it gives you the information about its items.
In fact, from wikipedia:
```
In mathematics, a tuple is a finite sequence or ordered list of numbers or, more generally, mathematical objects, which are called the elements of the tuple. An n-tuple is a tuple of n elements, where n is a non-negative integer. There is only one 0-tuple, called the empty tuple. A 1-tuple and a 2-tuple are commonly called a singleton and an ordered pair, respectively. The term "infinite tuple" is occasionally used for "infinite sequences".
Tuples are usually written by listing the elements within parentheses "( )" and separated by commas; for example, (2, 7, 4, 1, 7) denotes a 5-tuple. Other types of brackets are sometimes used, although they may have a different meaning.[a]
An n-tuple can be formally defined as the image of a function that has the set of the n first natural numbers as its domain. Tuples may be also defined from ordered pairs by a recurrence starting from an ordered pair; indeed, an n-tuple can be identified with the ordered pair of its (n − 1) first elements and its nth element
```
(https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Tuple)
From a data structure standpoint, a tuple can be seen as an array of fixed arity/size, then if an array is not a function, so shouldn't a tuple too.
When it says "arrays, which may be thought of as functions whose domains are isomorphic to contiguous subsets of the integers", is it saying that this:
const list = ['a', 'b', 'c']
is syntactic sugar for expressing something like this: function list(index) {
switch (index) {
case 0: return 'a'
case 1: return 'b'
case 2: return 'c'
}
}Arrays and structures are functions.
And all three are tuple [input, output] pattern matches, with the special case that in “call/select tuples”, input is always fully defined, with output simply being the consequence of its match.
And with arrays, structures and overloaded functions being unions of tuples to match to. And structure inputs (I.e. fields) being literal inline enumeration values.
And so are generics.
In fact, in functional programming, everything is a pattern match if you consider even enumeration values as a set of comparison functions that return the highly used enumerations true or false, given sibling values.
What about replacing
> Haskell provides indexable arrays, which may be thought of as functions whose domains are isomorphic to contiguous subsets of the integers.
with
> Haskell provides indexable arrays, which are functions on the domain [0, ..., k-1]?
Or is the domain actually anything "isomorphic to contiguous subsets of the integers"?
An array is a function that can be mutated at runtime. That’s essentially the main difference.
Doesn't lambda calculus show that you can let everything be functions?
IIRC, K rationalizes arrays and dictionaries with functions, e.g. you see arr[x;y] and fun[x;y]. Interestingly, this also highlights the connection between currying and projection, i.e. we can project/curry the above like arr[x] and fun[x].
You can consider any vector a function, though it's not always helpful to do so
Any expression-value can be a function, if you simply define the meaning of applying the the expression-value to another expression-value to be something compatible with your definition of a function.
The analog of a dot product of vectors is an integral over the product of functions.
The matrix multiplication of vectors - or a row and a column vector - which is then just taking the dot product is called an inner product. So for functions the inner product is an integral over where the functions are defined -
< f, g> = \int f(x) g(x) dx
Likewise you can multiply functions by a "kernel" which is a bit like multiplying a vector by a matrix
< A f, g> = \int \int A(x,y) f(y) g(x) dx dy
The fourier transform is a particular kernel
No, the best thing you can do for simplicity is to not conflate concepts. The perpetual idea of mixing data and execution is a misguided search for a silver bullet and it never makes things better in the long term.
This is cleverness over craftsmanship. Keeping data and execution as separate as possible is what leads to simplicity and modularity.
The exception is data structures which need the data and the functions that deal with it to expose that data conveniently to be closely tied to each other.
Everything else is an unnecessary dependency that obscures what is actually happening and makes two things that could be separated depend on each other.
Arrays are objects (allocated memory and metadata if you will). The function is what takes the array and an int and returns an item.
It makes obvious sense to consider an array as a function with the index as its input argument and the element its output, i.e. f(x) = A[x]... but this isn't the first time I've encountered this and I still don't see the practical benefit of considering things from this perspective.
When I'm writing code and need to reach for an array-like data structure, the conceptual correspondence to a function is not even remotely on my radar. I'm considering algorithmic complexity of reads vs writes, managed vs unmanaged collections, allocation, etc.
I guess this is one of those things that's of primary interest to language designers?
idk probably?
No - An array is a data structure that stores pre-calculated values in memory, whereas a function is executable logic that computes a result only when it is called.
> Haskell provides indexable arrays, which may be thought of as functions whose domains are isomorphic to contiguous subsets of the integers.
> I found this to be a hilariously obtuse and unnecessarily formalist description of a common data structure.
Well it is haskell. Try to understand what a monad is. Haskell loves complexity. That also taps right into the documentation.
> I look at this description and think that it is actually a wonderful definition of the essence of arrays!
I much prefer simplicity. Including in documentation.
I do not think that description is useful.
To me, Arrays are about storing data. But functions can also do that, so I also would not say the description is completely incorrect either.
> who can say that it is not actually a far better piece of documentation than some more prosaic description might have been?
I can say that. The documentation does not seem to be good, in my opinion. Once you reach this conclusion, it is easy to say too. But this is speculative because ... what is a "more prosaic description"? There can be many ways to make a worse documentation too. But, also, better documentation.
> To a language designer, the correspondence between arrays and functions (for it does exist, independent of whether you think it is a useful way to document them) is alluring, for one of the best ways to improve a language is to make it smaller.
I agree that there is a correspondence. I disagree that Haskell's documentation is good here.
> currying/uncurrying is equivalent to unflattening/flattening an array
So, there are some similarities between arrays and functions. I do not think this means that both are equivalent to one another.
> would like to see what it would be like for a language to fully exploit the array-function correspondence.
Does Haskell succeed in explaining what a Monad is? If not, then it failed there. What if it also fails in other areas with regards to documentation?
I think you need to compare Haskell to other languages, C or Python. I don't know if C does a better job with regards to its documentation; or C++. But I think Python does a better job than the other languages. So that is a comparison that should work.
From a mathematical point of view, a real vector of length n is a function from Z_n to R.
When I was learning programming, I was surprised that in most programming languages we write f(k), but vec[k].
However, we do have syntax vec.at(k) or vec.get(k) in quite a few languages.