554 lines
26 KiB
Markdown
554 lines
26 KiB
Markdown
---
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title: "Implementing and Verifying \"Static Program Analysis\" in Agda, Part 3: Lattices of Finite Height"
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series: "Static Program Analysis in Agda"
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description: "In this post, I describe the class of finite-height lattices, and prove that lattices we've alread seen are in that class"
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date: 2024-07-06T17:37:45-07:00
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draft: true
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tags: ["Agda", "Programming Languages"]
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---
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In the previous post, I introduced the class of finite-height lattices:
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lattices where chains made from elements and the less-than operator `<`
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can only be so long. As a first example,
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[natural numbers form a lattice]({{< relref "01_spa_agda_lattices#natural-numbers" >}}),
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but they __are not a finite-height lattice__; the following chain can be made
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infinitely long:
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{{< latex >}}
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0 < 1 < 2 < ...
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{{< /latex >}}
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There isn't a "biggest natural number"! On the other hand, we've seen that our
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[sign lattice]({{< relref "01_spa_agda_lattices#sign-lattice" >}}) has a finite
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height; the longest chain we can make is three elements long; I showed one
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such chain (there are many chains of three elements) in
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[the previous post]({{< relref "02_spa_agda_combining_lattices#sign-three-elements" >}}),
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but here it is again:
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{{< latex >}}
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\bot < + < \top
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{{< /latex >}}
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It's also true that the [Cartesian product lattice \(L_1 \times L_2\)]({{< relref "02_spa_agda_combining_lattices#the-cartesian-product-lattice" >}})
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has a finite height, as long as \(L_1\) and \(L_2\) are themselves finite-height
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lattices. In the specific case where both \(L_1\) and \(L_2\) are the sign
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lattice (\(L_1 = L_2 = \text{Sign} \)) we can observe that the longest
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chains have five elements. The following is one example:
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{{< latex >}}
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(\bot, \bot) < (\bot, +) < (\bot, \top) < (+, \top) < (\top, \top)
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{{< /latex >}}
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{#sign-prod-chain}
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The fact that \(L_1\) and \(L_2\) are themselves finite-height lattices is
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important; if either one of them is not, we can easily construct an infinite
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chain of the products. If we allowed \(L_2\) to be natural numbers, we'd
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end up with infinite chains like this one:
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{#product-both-finite-height}
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{{< latex >}}
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(\bot, 0) < (\bot, 1) < (\bot, 2) < ...
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{{< /latex >}}
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Another lattice that has a finite height under certain conditions is
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[the map lattice]({{< relref "02_spa_agda_combining_lattices#the-map-lattice" >}}).
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The "under certain conditions" part is important; we can easily construct
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an infinite chain of map lattice elements in general:
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{{< latex >}}
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\{ a : 1 \} < \{ a : 1, b : 1 \} < \{ a: 1, b: 1, c: 1 \} < ...
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{{< /latex >}}
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As long as we have infinite keys to choose from, we can always keep
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adding new keys to make bigger and bigger maps. But if we fix the keys in
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the map --- say, we use only `a` and `b` --- then suddenly our heights are once
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again fixed. In fact, for the two keys I just picked, one longest chain
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is remarkably similar to the product chain above.
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{#fin-keys}
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{{< latex >}}
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\{a: \bot, a: \bot\} < \{a: \bot, b: +\} < \{a: \bot, b: \top\} < \{a: +, b: \top\} < \{a: \top, b: \top\}
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{{< /latex >}}
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The class of finite-height lattices is important for static program analysis,
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because it ensures that out our analyses don't take infinite time. Though
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there's an intuitive connection ("finite lattices mean finite execution"),
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the details of why the former is needed for the latter are nuanced. We'll
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talk about them in a subsequent post.
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In the meantime, let's dig deeper into the notion of finite height, and
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the Agda proofs of the properties I've introduced thus far.
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### Formalizing Finite Height
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The formalization I settled on is quite similar to the informal description:
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a lattice has a finite height of length \(h\) if the longest chain
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of elements compared by \((<)\) is exactly \(h\). There's only a slight
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complication: we allow for equivalent-but-not-equal elements in lattices.
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For instance, for a map lattice, we don't care about the order of the keys:
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so long as two maps relate the same set of keys to the same respective values,
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we will consider them equal. This, however, is beyond the notion of Agda's
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propositional equality (`_≡_`). Thus, we we need to generalize the definition
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of a chain to support equivalences. I parameterize the `Chain` module
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in my code by an equivalence relation, as well as the comparison relation `R`,
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which we will set to `<` for our chains. The equivalence relation and `R`/`<`
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are expected to play together nicely (if `a < b`, and `a` is equivalent to `c`,
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then it should be the case that `c < b`).
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{{< codelines "agda" "agda-spa/Chain.agda" 3 7 >}}
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From there, the definition of the `Chain` data type is much like the definition
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of a vector, but indexed by the endpoints, and containing witnesses of `R`/`<`
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between its elements. The indexing allows for representing
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the type of chains between particular lattice elements, and serves to ensure
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concatenation and other operations don't merge disparate chains.
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{{< codelines "agda" "agda-spa/Chain.agda" 19 21 >}}
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In the `done` case, we create a single-element chain, which has no comparisons.
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In this case, the chain starts and stops at the same element (where "the same"
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is modulo our equivalence). The `step` case prepends a new comparison `a1 < a2`
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to an existing chain; once again, we allow for the existing chain to start
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with a different-but-equivalent element `a2'`.
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With that definition in hand, I define what it means for a type of
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chains between elements of the lattice `A` to have a maximum height; simply
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put, all chains must have length less than or equal to the maximum.
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{{< codelines "agda" "agda-spa/Chain.agda" 38 39 >}}
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Though `Bounded` specifies _a_ bound on the length of chains, it doesn't
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specify _the_ (lowest) bound. Specifically, if the chains can only have
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length three, they are bounded by both 3, 30, and 300. To claim a lowest
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bound, we need to show that a chain of that length actually exists (otherwise,
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we could take the previous natural number, and it would be a bound as well).
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Thus, I define the `Height` predicate to require that a chain of the desired
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height exists, and that this height bounds the length of all other chains.
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{{< codelines "agda" "agda-spa/Chain.agda" 47 48 >}}
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Finally, for a lattice to have a finite height, the type of chains formed by using
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its less-than operator needs to have that height (satisfy the `Height h` predicate).
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To avoid having to thread through the equivalence relation, congruence proof,
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and more, I define a specialized predicate for lattices specifically.
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I do so as a "method" in my `IsLattice` record.
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{{< codelines "agda" "agda-spa/Lattice.agda" 153 180 "hl_lines = 27 28">}}
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Thus, bringing the operators and other definitions of `IsLattice` into scope
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will also bring in the `FixedHeight` predicate.
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### Fixed Height of the "Above-Below" Lattice
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We've already seen intuitive evidence that the sign lattice --- which is an instance of
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the ["above-below" lattice]({{< relref "01_spa_agda_lattices#the-above-below-lattice" >}}) ---
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has a fixed height. The reason is simple: we extended a set of incomparable
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elements with a single element that's greater, and a single element that's lower.
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We can't make chains out of incomparable elements (since we can't compare them
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using `<`); thus, we can only have one `<` from the new least element, and
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one `<` from the new greatest element.
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The proof is a bit tedious, but not all that complicated.
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First, a few auxiliary helpers; feel free to read only the type signatures.
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They specify, respectively:
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1. That the bottom element \(\bot\) of the above-below lattice is less than any
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concrete value from the underlying set. For instance, in the sign lattice case, \(\bot < +\).
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2. That \(\bot\) is the only element satisfying the first property; that is,
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any value strictly less than an element of the underlying set must be \(\bot\).
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3. That the top element \(\top\) of the above-below lattice is greater than
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any concrete value of the underlying set. This is the dual of the first property.
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4. That, much like the bottom element is the only value strictly less than elements
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of the underlying set, the top element is the only value strictly greater.
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{{< codelines "agda" "agda-spa/Lattice/AboveBelow.agda" 315 335 >}}
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From there, we can construct an instance of the longest chain. Actually,
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there's a bit of a hang-up: what if the underlying set is empty? Concretely,
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what if there were no signs? Then we could only construct a chain with
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one comparison: \(\bot < \top\). Instead of adding logic to conditionally
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specify the length, I simply require that the set is populated by requiring
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a witness
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{{< codelines "agda" "agda-spa/Lattice/AboveBelow.agda" 85 85 >}}
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I use this witness to construct the two-`<` chain.
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{{< codelines "agda" "agda-spa/Lattice/AboveBelow.agda" 339 340 >}}
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The proof that the length of two --- in terms of comparisons --- is the
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bound of all chains of `AboveBelow` elements requires systematically
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rejecting all longer chains. Informally, suppose you have a chain of
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three or more comparisons.
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1. If it starts with \(\top\), you can't add any more elements since that's the
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greatest element (contradiction).
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2. If you start with an element of the underlying set, you could add another
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element, but it has to be the top element; after that, you can't add any
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more (contradiction).
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3. If you start with \(\bot\), you could arrive at a chain of two comparisons,
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but you can't go beyond that (in three cases, each leading to contradictions).
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{{< codelines "agda" "agda-spa/Lattice/AboveBelow.agda" 342 355 "hl_lines=8-14">}}
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Thus, the above-below lattice has a length of two comparisons (or alternatively,
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three elements).
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{{< codelines "agda" "agda-spa/Lattice/AboveBelow.agda" 357 358 >}}
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And that's it.
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### Fixed Height of the Product Lattice
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Now, for something less tedious. We saw above that for a product lattice
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to have a finite height,
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[its constituent lattices must have a finite height](#product-both-finite-height).
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The proof was by contradiction (by constructing an infinitely long product
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chain given a single infinite lattice). As a result, we'll focus this
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section on products of two finite lattices `A` and `B`. Additionally, for the
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proofs in this section, I require element equivalence to be decidable.
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{{< codelines "agda" "agda-spa/Lattice/Prod.agda" 115 117 >}}
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Let's think about how we might go about constructing the longest chain in
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a product lattice. Let's start with some arbitrary element \(p_1 = (a_1, b_1)\).
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We need to find another value that isn't equal to \(p_1\), because we'rebuilding
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chains of the less-than operator \((<)\), and not the less-than-or-equal operator
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\((\leq)\). As a result, we need to change either the first component, the second
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component, or both. If we're building "to the right" (adding bigger elements),
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the new components would need to be bigger. Suppose then that we came up
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with \(a_2\) and \(b_2\), with \(a_1 < a_2\) and \(b_1 < b_2\). We could then
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create a length-one chain:
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{{< latex >}}
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(a_1, b_1) < (a_2, b_2)
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{{< /latex >}}
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That works, but we can construct an even longer chain by increasing only one
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element at a time:
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{{< latex >}}
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(a_1, b_1) < (a_1, b_2) < (a_2, b_2)
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{{< /latex >}}
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We can apply this logic every time; the conclusion is that when building
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up a chain, we need to increase one element at a time. Then, how many times
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can we increase an element? Well, if lattice `A` has a height of two (comparisons),
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then we can take its lowest element, and increase it twice. Similarly, if
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lattice `B` has a height of three, starting at its lowest element, we can
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increase it three times. In all, when building a chain of `A × B`, we can
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increase an element five times.
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This gives us a recipe for constructing
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the longest chain in the product lattice: take the longest chains of `A` and
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`B`, and start with the product of their lowest elements. Then, increase
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the elements one at a time according to the chains. The simplest way to do
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that might be to increase by all elements of the `A` chain, and then
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by all of the elements of the `B` chain (or the other way around). That's the
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strategy I took when [constructing the \(\text{Sign} \times \text{Sign}\)
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chain above](#sign-prod-chain).
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To formalize this notion, a few lemmas. First, given two chains where
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one starts with the same element another ends with, we can combine them into
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one long chain.
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{{< codelines "agda" "agda-spa/Chain.agda" 31 33 >}}
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More interestingly, given a chain of comparisons in one lattice, we are
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able to lift it into a chain in another lattice by applying a function
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to each element. This function must be monotonic, because it must not
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be able to reverse \(a < b\) such that \(f(b) < f(a)\). Moreover, this function
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should be injective, because if \(f(a) = f(b)\), then a chain \(a < b\) might
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be collapsed into \(f(a) \not< f(a)\), changing its length. Finally,
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the function needs to produce equivalent outputs when giving equivalent inputs.
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The result is the following lemma:
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{{< codelines "agda" "agda-spa/Lattice.agda" 196 217 >}}
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Given this, and two lattices of finite height, we construct the full product
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chain by lifting the `A` chain into the product via \(a \mapsto (a, \bot)\),
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lifting the `B` chain into the product via \(b \mapsto (\top, b)\), and
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concatenating the results. This works because the first chain ends with
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\((\top, \bot)\), and the second starts with it.
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{{< codelines "agda" "agda-spa/Lattice/Prod.agda" 177 179 >}}
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This gets us the longest chain; what remains is to prove that this chain's
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length is the bound of all other changes. To do so, we need to work in
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the opposite direction; given a chain in the product lattice, we need to
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somehow reduce it to chains in lattices `A` and `B`, and leverage their
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finite height to complete the proof.
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The key idea is that for every two consecutive elements in the product lattice
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chain, we know that at least one of their components must've increased.
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This increase had to come either from elements in lattice `A` or in lattice `B`.
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We can thus stick this increase into an `A`-chain or a `B`-chain, increasing
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its length. Since one of the chains grows with every consecutive pair, the
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number of consecutive pairs can't exceed the length of the `A` and `B` chains.
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I implement this idea as an `unzip` function, which takes a product chain
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and produces two chains made from its increases. By the logic we've described,
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the length two chains has to bound the main one's. I give the signature below,
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and will put the implementation in a collapsible detail block. One last
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detail is that the need to decide which chain to grow --- and thus which element
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has increased --- is what introduces the need for decidable equality.
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{{< codelines "agda" "agda-spa/Lattice/Prod.agda" 158 158 >}}
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{{< codelines "agda" "agda-spa/Lattice/Prod.agda" 158 172 "" "**(Click here for the implementation of `unzip`)**" >}}
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Having decomposed the product chain into constituent chains, we simply combine
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the facts that they have to be bounded by the height of the `A` and `B` lattices,
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as well as the fact that they bound the combined chain.
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{{< codelines "agda" "agda-spa/Lattice/Prod.agda" 174 183 "hl_lines = 8-9" >}}
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This completes the proof!
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### Iterated Products
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The product lattice allows us to combine finite height lattices into a
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new finite height lattice. From there, we can use this newly lattice
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as a component of yet another product lattice. For instance, if we had
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\(L_1 \times L_2\), we can take a product of that with \(L_1\) again,
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and get \(L_1 \times (L_1 \times L_2)\). Since this also creates a
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finite-height lattice, we can repeat this process, and keep
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taking a product with \(L_1\), creating:
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{{< latex >}}
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\overbrace{L_1 \times ... \times L_1}^{n\ \text{times}} \times L_2.
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{{< /latex >}}
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I call this the _iterated product lattice_. Its significance will become
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clear shortly; in the meantime, let's prove that it is indeed a lattice
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(of finite height).
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To create an iterated product lattice, we still need two constituent
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lattices as input.
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{{< codelines "agda" "agda-spa/Lattice/IterProd.agda" 7 11 >}}
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{{< codelines "agda" "agda-spa/Lattice/IterProd.agda" 21 22 >}}
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At a high level, the proof goes by induction on the number of applications
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of the product. There's just one trick. I'd like to build up an `isLattice`
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instance even if `A` and `B` are not finite-height. That's because in
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that case, the iterated product is still a lattice, just not one with
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a finite height. On the other hand, the `isFiniteHeightLattice` proof
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requires the `isLattice` proof. Since we're building up by induction,
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that means that every recursive invocation of the function, we need
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to get the "partial" lattice instance and give it to the "partial" finite
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height lattice instance. When I implemented the inductive proof for
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`isLattice` independently from the (more specific) inductive proof
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of `isFiniteHeightLattice`, Agda could not unify the two `isLattice`
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instances (the "actual" one and the one that serves as witness
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for `isFiniteHeightLattice`). This led to some trouble and inconvenience,
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and so, I thought it best to build the two up together.
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To build up with the lattice instance and --- if possible --- the finite height
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instance, I needed to allow for the constituent lattices either finite
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or infinite. I supported this by defining a helper type:
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{{< codelines "agda" "agda-spa/Lattice/IterProd.agda" 34 40 >}}
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Then, I defined the "everything at once" type, in which, instead of
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a field for the proof of finite height, has a field that constructs
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this proof _if the necessary additional information is present_.
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{{< codelines "agda" "agda-spa/Lattice/IterProd.agda" 42 55 >}}
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Finally, the proof by induction. It's actually relatively long, so I'll
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include it as a collapsible block.
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{{< codelines "agda" "agda-spa/Lattice/IterProd.agda" 57 95 "" "**(Click here to expand the inductive proof)**" >}}
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### Fixed Height of the Map Lattice
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We saw above that [we can make a map lattice have a finite height if
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we fix its keys](#finite-keys). How does this work? Well, if the keys
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are always the same, we can think of such a map as just a tuple, with
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as many element as there are keys.
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{{< latex >}}
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\begin{array}{cccccc}
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\{ & a: 1, & b: 2, & c: 3, & \} \\
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& & \iff & & \\
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( & 1, & 2, & 3 & )
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\end{array}
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{{< /latex >}}
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This is why I introduced the [iterated product](#iterated-products) earlier;
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we can use them to construct the second lattice in the example above.
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I'll take one departure from that example, though: I'll "pad" the tuples
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with an additional unit element at the end. The unit type (denoted \(\top\))
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--- which has only a single element --- forms a finite height lattice trivially;
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I prove this in [an appendix below](#appendix-the-unit-lattice).
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Using this padding helps reduce the number of special cases; without the
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adding, the tuple definition might be something like the following:
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{{< latex >}}
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\text{tup}(A, k) =
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\begin{cases}
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\top & k = 0 \\
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A & k = 1 \\
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A \times \text{tup}(A, k - 1) & k > 1
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\end{cases}
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{{< /latex >}}
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On the other hand, if we were to allow the extra padding, we could drop
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the definition down to:
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{{< latex >}}
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\text{tup}(A, k) = \text{iterate}(t \mapsto A \times t, k, \bot) =
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\begin{cases}
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\top & k = 0 \\
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A \times \text{tup}(A, k - 1) & k > 0
|
||
\end{cases}
|
||
{{< /latex >}}
|
||
|
||
And so, we drop from two to three cases, which means less proof work for us.
|
||
The tough part is to prove that the two representations of maps --- the
|
||
key-value list and the iterated product --- are equivalent. We will not
|
||
have much trouble proving that they're both lattices (we did that last time,
|
||
for both [products]({{< relref "02_spa_agda_combining_lattices#the-cartesian-product-lattice" >}}) and [maps]({{< relref "02_spa_agda_combining_lattices#the-map-lattice" >}})). Instead, what we need to do is prove that
|
||
the height of one lattice is the same as the height of the other. We prove
|
||
this by providing something like an [isomorphism](https://mathworld.wolfram.com/Isomorphism.html):
|
||
a pair of functions that convert between the two representations, and
|
||
preserve the properties and relationships (such as \((\sqcup)\)) of lattice
|
||
elements. In fact, list of the conversion functions' properties is quite
|
||
extensive:
|
||
|
||
{{< codelines "agda" "agda-spa/Isomorphism.agda" 22 33 "hl_lines=8-12">}}
|
||
|
||
1. First, the functions must preserve our definition of equivalence. Thus,
|
||
if we convert two equivalent elements from the list representation to
|
||
the tuple representation, the resulting tuples should be equivalent as well.
|
||
The reverse must be true, too.
|
||
2. Second, the functions must preserve the binary operations --- see also the definition
|
||
of a [homomorphism](https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Homomorphism#Definition).
|
||
Specifically, if \(f\) is a conversion function, then the following
|
||
should hold:
|
||
|
||
{{< latex >}}
|
||
f(a \sqcup b) \approx f(a) \sqcup f(b)
|
||
{{< /latex >}}
|
||
|
||
For the purposes of proving that equivalent maps have finite heights, it
|
||
turns out that this property need only hold for the join operator \((\sqcup)\).
|
||
3. Finally, the functions must be inverses of each other. If you convert
|
||
list to a tuple, and then the tuple back into a list, the resulting
|
||
value should be equivalent to what we started with. In fact, they
|
||
need to be both "left" and "right" inverses, so that both \(f(g(x))\approx x\)
|
||
and \(g(f(x)) \approx x\).
|
||
|
||
Given this, the high-level proof is in two parts:
|
||
|
||
1. __Proving that a chain of the same height exists in the second (e.g., tuple)
|
||
lattice:__ To do this, we want to take the longest chain in the first
|
||
(e.g. key-value list) lattice, and convert it into a chain in the second.
|
||
The mechanism for this is not too hard to imagine: we just take the original
|
||
chain, and apply the conversion function to each element.
|
||
|
||
Intuitively, this works because of the structure-preserving properties
|
||
we required above. For instance (recall the
|
||
[definition of \((\leq)\) explained by Lars Huple](https://lars.hupel.info/topics/crdt/03-lattices/#there-), which in brief is \(a \leq b \triangleq a \sqcup b = b\)):
|
||
|
||
{{< latex >}}
|
||
\begin{align*}
|
||
a \leq b & \iff (\text{definition of less than})\\
|
||
a \sqcup b \approx b & \iff (\text{conversions preserve equivalence}) \\
|
||
f(a \sqcup b) \approx f(b) & \iff (\text{conversions distribute over binary operations}) \\
|
||
f(a) \sqcup f(b) \approx f(b) & \iff (\text{definition of less than}) \\
|
||
f(a) \leq f(b)
|
||
\end{align*}
|
||
{{< /latex >}}
|
||
2. __Proving that longer chains can't exist in the second (e.g., tuple) lattice:__
|
||
we've already seen the mechanism to port a chain from one lattice to
|
||
another lattice, and we can use this same mechanism (but switching directions)
|
||
to go in reverse. If we do that, we can take a chain of questionable length
|
||
in the tuple lattice, port it back to the key-value map, and use the
|
||
(already known) fact that its chains are bounded to conclude the same
|
||
thing about the tuple chain.
|
||
|
||
As you can tell, the chain porting mechanism is doing the heavy lifting here.
|
||
It's relatively easy to implement given the conditions we've set on
|
||
conversion functions, in both directions:
|
||
|
||
{{< codelines "agda" "agda-spa/Isomorphism.agda" 51 63 >}}
|
||
|
||
With that, we can prove the second lattice's finite height:
|
||
|
||
{{< codelines "agda" "agda-spa/Isomorphism.agda" 65 72 >}}
|
||
|
||
|
||
The conversion functions are also not too difficult to define. I give
|
||
them below, but I refrain from showing proofs of the more involved
|
||
properties (such as the fact that `from` and `to` are inverses, preserve
|
||
equivalence, and distribute over join) here. You can view them by clicking
|
||
the link at the top of the code block below.
|
||
|
||
{{< codelines "agda" "agda-spa/Lattice/FiniteValueMap.agda" 67 84 >}}
|
||
|
||
Above, `FiniteValueMap ks` is the type of maps whose keys are fixed to
|
||
`ks`; defined as follows:
|
||
|
||
{{< codelines "agda" "agda-spa/Lattice/FiniteMap.agda" 50 52 >}}
|
||
|
||
Proving the remaining properties (which as I mentioned, I omit from
|
||
the main body of the post) is sufficient to apply the isomorphism,
|
||
proving that maps with finite keys are of a finite height.
|
||
|
||
|
||
### Using the Finite Height Property
|
||
|
||
Lattices having a finite height is a crucial property for the sorts of
|
||
static program analyses I've been working to implement.
|
||
We can create functions that traverse "up" through the lattice,
|
||
creating larger values each time. If these lattices are of a finite height,
|
||
then the static analyses functions can only traverse "so high".
|
||
Under certain conditions, this
|
||
guarantees that our static analysis will eventually terminate with
|
||
a [fixed point](https://mathworld.wolfram.com/FixedPoint.html). Pragmatically,
|
||
this is a state in which running our analysis does not yield any more information.
|
||
|
||
The way that the fixed point is found is called the _fixed point algorithm_.
|
||
We'll talk more about this in the next post.
|
||
|
||
{{< seriesnav >}}
|
||
|
||
### Appendix: The Unit Lattice
|
||
|
||
The unit lattice is a relatively boring one. I use the built-in unit type
|
||
in Agda, which (perhaps a bit confusingly) is represented using the symbol `⊤`.
|
||
It only has a single constructor, `tt`.
|
||
|
||
{{< codelines "agda" "agda-spa/Lattice/Unit.agda" 6 7 >}}
|
||
|
||
The equivalence for the unit type is just propositional equality (we have
|
||
no need to identify unequal values of `⊤`, since there is only one value).
|
||
|
||
{{< codelines "agda" "agda-spa/Lattice/Unit.agda" 17 25 >}}
|
||
|
||
Both the join \((\sqcup)\) and meet \((\sqcap)\) operations are trivially defined;
|
||
in both cases, they simply take two `tt`s and produce a new `tt`.
|
||
Mathematically, one might write this as \((\text{tt}, \text{tt}) \mapsto \text{tt}\).
|
||
In Agda:
|
||
|
||
{{< codelines "agda" "agda-spa/Lattice/Unit.agda" 30 34 >}}
|
||
|
||
These operations are trivially associative, commutative, and idempotent.
|
||
|
||
{{< codelines "agda" "agda-spa/Lattice/Unit.agda" 39 46 >}}
|
||
|
||
That's sufficient for them to be semilattices:
|
||
|
||
{{< codelines "agda" "agda-spa/Lattice/Unit.agda" 48 54 >}}
|
||
|
||
The [absorption laws]({{< relref "01_spa_agda_lattices#absorption-laws" >}})
|
||
are also trivially satisfied, which means that the unit type forms a lattice.
|
||
|
||
{{< codelines "agda" "agda-spa/Lattice/Unit.agda" 78 90 >}}
|
||
|
||
Since there's only one element, it's not really possible to have chains
|
||
that contain any more than one value. As a result, the height (in comparisons)
|
||
of the unit lattice is zero.
|
||
|
||
{{< codelines "agda" "agda-spa/Lattice/Unit.agda" 102 117 >}}
|