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Martin Hofmann’s case for non-strictly positive 1 data types

Abstract

We describe the breadth-first traversal algorithm by Martin Hofmann that uses a non-strictly positive data type and carry out a simple verification in an extensional setting. Termination is shown by implementing the algorithm in the strongly normalising extension of system F by Mendler-style recursion. We then analyze the same algorithm by alternative verifications in an intensional setting, in a setting with non-strictly positive inductive definitions (not just non-strictly positive data types), and one by algebraic reduction. The verification approaches are compared in terms of notions of simulation and should elucidate the somewhat mysterious algorithm and thus make a case for other uses of non-strictly positive data types. Except for the termination proof, which cannot be formalised in Coq, all proofs were formalised in Coq and some of the algorithms were implemented in Agda and Haskell

Similar works

This paper was published in Cronfa at Swansea University.

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