koika
cogent
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koika | cogent | |
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2 | 4 | |
128 | 157 | |
6.3% | 0.0% | |
0.0 | 0.0 | |
7 months ago | about 1 year ago | |
Coq | Isabelle | |
GNU General Public License v3.0 only | GNU General Public License v3.0 or later |
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koika
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Let's collect relatively new research programming languages in this thread
https://github.com/koka-lang/koka Algebraic effects and reference counting. https://github.com/mit-plv/koika hardware description DSL for coq
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There's an ongoing effort to rewrite Principia Mathematica using Coq
There are ongoing research projects about that, you may want to have a look at Kôika (https://github.com/mit-plv/koika), Kami (https://github.com/mit-plv/kami), Lutsig (https://github.com/CakeML/hardware) and silveroak (https://github.com/project-oak/silveroak). Closer to HLS there is also Vericert (https://github.com/ymherklotz/vericert). There may be other research project I am unaware of, feel free to add them in a reply, I am interested in it.
cogent
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Let's collect relatively new research programming languages in this thread
Cogent, late 2010s, a language with linear types for verification. The idea is that you write functional-looking code that is easy to verify using the functional semantics, but with an efficient compilation strategy enabled by linear types to get realistic system programs.
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Thoughts on the Rascal meta-programming language
Of course. Here was the first incarnation: https://github.com/amw-zero/sligh. It has a decent overview of the idea in the readme. To sum it up here, the idea is: have a language built around model-driven development and model-based testing, where you write a simple model of an application, and the implementation and model-based tests are compiled for you. I wrote about the overall model-based testing strategy here. This idea comes from self-certifying compilers that produce proofs of their correctness such as Cogent, but we drop the formality requirement and use property-based testing to compare the implementation and model.
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Are there any ML style languages with no runtime?
That made me think of this project Cogent. This is almost certainly not what you’re looking for, because it’s aimed at formal verification. But, it does have some interesting properties, like manual memory management through uniqueness types. It doesn’t even support recursion though so, probably not so good as a general purpose PL.
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I'm a freelancer and I've got a customer who is asking for USB driver for a new device. They want it written in c++ and I said I'd only consider creating and supporting it if it was written in Rust. 🤷♂️
https://github.com/NICTA/cogent is for auto generating isabelle theorems + C code.
What are some alternatives?
kami - A Platform for High-Level Parametric Hardware Specification and its Modular Verification
py4j - Py4J enables Python programs to dynamically access arbitrary Java objects
vericert - A formally verified high-level synthesis tool based on CompCert and written in Coq.
edsl - Example of embedding TypeScript as an EDSL inside of another language
CompCert - The CompCert formally-verified C compiler
programming-language-subreddits-and-their-choice-of-words - How do the different communities talk?
hardware - Verilog development and verification project for HOL4
karamel - KaRaMeL is a tool for extracting low-level F* programs to readable C code
silveroak - Formal specification and verification of hardware, especially for security and privacy.
datafun - Research on integrating datalog & lambda calculus via monotonicity types
jasmin - Language for high-assurance and high-speed cryptography