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COSC 4P41 – Functional Programming COSC 4P41 Functional Programming • Instructor: Michael Winter – Office J323 – Office Hours: Mon & Fri 10:00am – noon – email: [email protected] • Webpage: http://www.cosc.brocku.ca/~mwinter/Courses/4P41/ • Course Description (Brock Calendar): Introduction to functional programming using the languages Haskell. Topics include all data types, type inference, pattern-matching, recursion, polymorphism, higher-order functions, lazy vs eager evaluation, modules and monads. • Prerequisites: three and one-half COSC credits or permission of the instructor. • Haskell: http://www.haskell.org © M. Winter 1.1 COSC 4P41 – Functional Programming Textbooks • Main Text – Haskell, The Craft of Functional Programming, 3rd edition, S. Thompson, Addison - Wesley (2011), ISBN 0-201-88295-7 • Supplemental Texts – The Haskell 2010 Report, Simon Marlow, online. – Real World Haskell, Bryan O'Sullivan, John Goerzen, Don Steward, O'Reilly (2009), ISBN 978-0-596-51498-3 – The Haskell School of Expression, P. Hudak, Cambridge University Press (2000), ISBN 0-521-64408-9 © M. Winter 1.2 COSC 4P41 – Functional Programming Course Work • Marking Scheme – Lab Tests (3x20%) – Final Lab Exam • Tests & Exam (D205) Lab Test 1 Lab Test 2 Lab Test 3 Exam © M. Winter 60% 40% February 01 @ 2:00pm – 3:30pm February 29 @ 2:00pm – 3:30pm March 21 @ 2:00pm – 3:30pm April 06 @ tba 1.3 COSC 4P41 – Functional Programming • A mark of at least 40% on the final exam is required to achieve a passing grade in this course. • Consideration regarding illness for test dates will only be considered if accompanied with the completed Departmental Medical Excuse form. • Academic misconduct is a serious offence. The principle of academic integrity, particularly of doing one's own work, documenting properly (including use of quotation marks, appropriate paraphrasing and referencing/citation), collaborating appropriately, and avoiding misrepresentation, is a core principle in university study. Students should consult Section VII, 'Academic Misconduct", in the "Academic Regulations and University Polices“ entry in the Undergraduate Calendar, available at brocku.ca/webcal to view a fuller description of prohibited actions, and the procedures and penalties. © M. Winter 1.4 COSC 4P41 – Functional Programming Course Outline Week Date Book/Chapt. Topics 1 Jan 04/08 [1] 1–3 Introduction to Functional Programming 2 Jan 11/15 [1] 4–5 Recursion and Data Types 3 Jan 18/22 [1] 6–7 Lists 4 Jan 25/29 [1] 9-10 Patterns of Computation, Functions as Values 5 Feb 01/05 [1] 12-13 Overloading, Type Classes, Type Checking 6 Feb 08/12 [1] 14-15 Algebraic Types 7 Feb 22/26* [1] 16 Abstract Data Types 8 Feb 29/Mar 04 [1] 17 Lazy Evaluation 9 Mar 07/11 [1] 18 Programming with Actions 10 Mar 14/18 [1] 8, 14.7 & 17.9 Reasoning about Programs 11 Mar 21/28** [1] 8, 14.7 & 17.9 Reasoning about Programs II 12 Apr 01/04 [2] 7 Language extensions, Review *Feb 17-21 is Reading Week. **Mar 25 is Good Friday. Make-up on Apr 04. © M. Winter 1.5 COSC 4P41 – Functional Programming Imperative languages • Von Neumann model: – store with addressable locations • machine code: – effect achieved by changing contents of store locations – instructions executed in sequence, flow of control altered by jumps • imperative language: – variable corresponds to store location – instructions executed in sequence, flow of control altered by conditional and loop statements – efficient implementation since close to design of conventional computers © M. Winter 1.6 COSC 4P41 – Functional Programming Functional languages • • • • computational model: lambda calculus mathematical functions: domain, range functional languages achieve effect by applying functions functional vs. imperative languages – store location – assignment statement vs. application of a function (expressions) • side-effects • aliasing • referential transparency © M. Winter 1.7 COSC 4P41 – Functional Programming Features of functional languages • usually strongly typed (modern languages) • algebraic type definitions – mathematical based notation – no (implicit) pointers • higher-order functions – can accept functions as parameters – can return functions as results • recursion as a basic principle • application of rewrite rule: – function call replaced by code body • run-time overhead garbage collection • slogan: define “what to do”, not “how to do” © M. Winter 1.8 COSC 4P41 – Functional Programming What is a function? A function is something which produces an output value depending on the input value(s). 12 34 inputs + output 46 A type is a collection of values. Usually functions are considered to take values of specific types as input, and produce values of another type. Int Int + Int A functional program is basically a list of definitions of functions. © M. Winter 1.9 COSC 4P41 – Functional Programming Definitions Haskell definitions are of the form: name :: type name = expression Examples: size :: Int size = (12+13)*4 square :: Int -> Int square n = n*n © M. Winter 1.10 COSC 4P41 – Functional Programming {-######################################################### FirstScript.hs Simon Thompson, June 1998 The purpose of this script is - to illustrate some simple definitions over integers (Int); - to give a first example of a script. #########################################################-} -- The value size is an integer (Int), defined to be -- the sum of twelve and thirteen. size :: Int size = 12+13 -- The function to square an integer. square :: Int -> Int square n = n*n -- The function to double an integer. double :: Int -> Int double n = 2*n -- An example using double, square and size. example :: Int example = double (size - square (2+2)) © M. Winter 1.11 COSC 4P41 – Functional Programming ########################################################### FirstLiterate.lhs Simon Thompson, June 1998 The purpose of this script is - to illustrate some simple definitions over integers (Int); - to give a first example of a literate script. ########################################################### The value size is an integer (Int), defined to be the sum of twelve and thirteen. > > size :: Int size = 12+13 The function to square an integer. > > square :: Int -> Int square n = n*n The function to double an integer. > > double :: Int -> Int double n = 2*n An example using double, square and size. > > example :: Int example = double (size - square (2+2)) © M. Winter 1.12 COSC 4P41 – Functional Programming The Booleans • type Bool • operations && and || or not not exOr :: Bool -> Bool -> Bool exOr x y = (x || y) && not (x && y) © M. Winter 1.13 COSC 4P41 – Functional Programming The integers • type Int: range –2147483648…2147483647 • type Integer: range unbounded • operations + sum © M. Winter * product ^ raise to the power - difference div whole number division mod remainder abs absolute value negate change sign 1.14 COSC 4P41 – Functional Programming Relational operators and overloading > greater than >= greater than or equal to == equal to /= not equal to <= less than or equal to < less than (==) for integers and Booleans. This means that (==) will have the type Int -> Int -> Bool Bool -> Bool -> Bool Indeed t -> t -> Bool if the type t carries an equality. (==) :: Eq a => a -> a -> Bool © M. Winter 1.15 COSC 4P41 – Functional Programming The rational numbers • type Rational (import Ratio) • operations % Integer -> Integer -> Rational numerator the numerator denominator the denominator fromInteger Integer -> Rational and +, *, -, negate, abs © M. Winter 1.16 COSC 4P41 – Functional Programming The characters • type Char ‘a’ ‘\t’ ‘\n’ ‘\\’ ‘\’’ ‘\”’ ‘\97’ © M. Winter tab newline backslash single quote double quote character with ASCII code 97, i.e., ‘9’ 1.17 COSC 4P41 – Functional Programming Layout mystery x = x*x +x +2 next x = … fun v1 v2 … vn | g1 = e1 | g2 = e2 … | otherwise = er © M. Winter 1.18 COSC 4P41 – Functional Programming Operators and Do-it-yourself operators (+) :: Int -> Int -> Int (+) 2 3 = 2 + 3 2 `max` 3 = max 2 3 Operator symbols !,#,$,%,&,*,+,.,/,<,=,>,?,\,^,|,:,-,~ (&&&) :: Int -> Int -> Int x &&& y | x > y = y | otherwise = x © M. Winter 1.19