SCL Types

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Basic types

SCL is statically typed language which means that types of the possible values of all variables are known already at compile time. The following types have builtin support:

  • Boolean
  • Byte, Short, Integer, Long
  • Float, Double
  • String
  • BooleanArray, ByteArray, ShortArray, IntegerArray, LongArray, FloatArray, DoubleArray
  • []
  • (), (,), (,,), ...
  • (->)
  • Maybe
  • Array

Other types are either imported from the host language or defined in SCL modules.

Some types are parametric (compare to generics in Java or templates in C++). For example, the list type [] is has one parameter: the type of the list elements. Thus [Integer] is the type of the integer lists and [String] is the type of string lists. [[Integer]] is the type of the lists of integer lists. Usually parameters are written after the type that is being parametrized: for example Maybe String or Array Integer, but some of the builtin types can be written in a special way in order to make the type expressions more readable:

[a] = [] a
(a,b) = (,) a b
(a,b,c) = (,,) a b c
...
a -> b = (->) a b

Particularly important type is (->), the type of functions. For example, the type of the function computing the length of a string is String -> Integer: the function takes a string as a parameter and returns an integer. Types of the functions taking multiple parameters are written by composing function types. For example, the type of a function taking nth element of a string list is [String] -> Integer -> String. The function takes a string list and integer as a parameter and returns String. Function type operator -> is associated right, i.e the previous type is equivalent to [String] -> (Integer -> String).