Design and Implementation of a Reversible Object-Oriented Programming Language

07/25/2017
by   Tue Haulund, et al.
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High-level reversible programming languages are few and far between and in general offer only rudimentary abstractions from the details of the underlying machine. Modern programming languages offer a wide array of language constructs and paradigms to facilitate the design of abstract interfaces, but we currently have a very limited understanding of the applicability of such features for reversible programming languages. We introduce the first reversible object-oriented programming language, ROOPL, with support for user-defined data types, class inheritance and subtype-polymorphism. The language extends the design of existing reversible imperative languages and it allows for effective implementation on reversible machines. We provide a formalization of the language semantics, the type system and we demonstrate the computational universality of the language by implementing a reversible Turing machine simulator. ROOPL statements are locally invertible at no extra cost to program size or computational complexity and the language provides direct access to the inverse semantics of each class method. We describe the techniques required for a garbage-free translation from ROOPL to the reversible assembly language PISA and provide a full implementation of said techniques. Our results indicate that core language features for object-oriented programming carries over to the field of reversible computing in some capacity.

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