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[RFC] Initial RFC for type aliases.
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docs/rfc/007-type-aliases.md
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# Leo RFC 007: Type Aliases
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## Authors
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- Max Bruce
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- Collin Chin
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- Alessandro Coglio
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- Eric McCarthy
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- Jon Pavlik
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- Damir Shamanaev
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- Damon Sicore
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- Howard Wu
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## Status
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DRAFT
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# Summary
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This RFC proposes the addition of type aliases to Leo,
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i.e. identifiers that abbreviate types and can be used wherever the latter can be used.
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A new top-level construct is proposed to define type aliases; no circularities are allowed.
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Type aliases are expanded away during compilation.
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# Motivation
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Many programming languages provide the ability to create aliases (i.e. synonyms) of types, such as C's `typedef`.
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The purpose may be to abbreviate a longer type,
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such as an alias `matrix` for `[i32; (3, 3)]` in an application in which 3x3 matrices of 32-bit integers are relevant
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(e.g. for 3-D rotations, even though fractional numbers may be more realistic).
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The purpose may also be to clarify the purpose and use of an existing type,
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such as an alias `balance` for `u64` in an application that keeps track of balances.
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The initial motivation that inspired this RFC (along with other RFCs)
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was the ability to have a type `string` for strings.
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Strings are arrays of characters according to RFC 001.
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With the array types of unspecified size proposed in RFC 006,
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`[char; _]` becomes a generic type for strings, which is desirable to alias with `string`.
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# Design
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The ABNF grammar changes as follows:
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```
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; modified rule:
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keyword = ...
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/ %s"true"
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/ %s"type" ; new
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/ %s"u8"
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/ ...
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; new rule:
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type-alias-declaration = %s"type" identifier "=" type ";"
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; modified rule:
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declaration = import-declaration
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/ function-declaration
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/ circuit-declaration
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/ constant-declaration
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/ type-alias-declaration ; new
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```
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A type alias declaration introduces the identifier to stand for the type.
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Only top-level type alias declarations are supported;
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they are not supported inside functions or circuit types.
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There must be no direct or indirect circularity in the type aliases.
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That is, it must be possible to expand all the type aliases away,
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obtaining an equivalent program without any type aliases.
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Note that the built-in `Self` is a bit like a type alias, standing for the enclosing circuit type;
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and `Self` is replaced with the enclosing circuit type during canonicalization.
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Thus, canonicalization could be a natural place to expand user-defined type aliases;
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after all, type aliases introduce multiple ways to denote the same types
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(and not just via direct aliasing, but also via indirect aliasing, or via aliasing of components),
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and canonicalization serves exactly to reduce multiple ways to say the same thing to one canonical way.
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On the other hand, expanding type aliases is more complicated than the current canonicalization transformations,
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which are all local and relatively simple.
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Expanding type aliases requires not only checking for circularities,
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but also to take into account references to type aliases from import declarations.
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For this reason, we may perform type alias expansion after canonicalization,
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such as just before type checking and inference.
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We could also make the expansion a part of the type checking and inference process,
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which already transforms the program by inferring missing types,
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so it could also expand type aliases away.
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In any case, it seems beneficial to expand type aliases away
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(whether during canonicalization or as part or preamble to type checking and inference)
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prior to performing more processing of the program for eventual compilation to R1CS.
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# Drawbacks
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As other extensions of the language, this makes things inherently a bit more complicated.
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# Effect on Ecosystem
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None; this is just a convenience for the Leo developer.
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# Alternatives
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An alternative to creating a type alias
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```
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type T = U;
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```
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is to create a circuit type
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```
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circuit T { get: U }
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```
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that contains a single member variable.
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This is clearly not equivalent to a type alias, because it involves conversions between `T` and `U`
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```
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T { get: u } // convert u:U to T
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t.get // convert t:T to U
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```
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whereas a type alias involves no conversions:
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if `T` is an alias of `U`, then `T` and `U` are the same type,
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more precisely two syntactically different ways to designate the same semantic type.
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While the conversions generally cause overhead in traditional programming languages,
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this may not be the case for Leo's compilation to R1CS,
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in which everything is flattened, including member variables of circuit types.
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Thus, it may be the case that the circuit `T` above reduces to just its member `U` in R1CS.
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It might also be argued that wrapping a type into a one-member-variable circuit type
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could be a better practice than aliasing the type, to enforce better type separation and safety.
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We need to consider the pros and cons of the two approaches,
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particularly in light of Leo's non-traditional compilation target.
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