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Cake day: August 11th, 2024

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  • lemmy seems to have lost my response to this, so I’ll type it again and hope that it doesn’t show up twice

    There’s three separate issues here:

    1. The ability to express multi-sorted algebras

    2. The ability to extend algebras with new sorts

    3. The ability to extend a single sort of an algebra with new variants

    For point 1, object algebras do support this even though I didn’t show it in the post:

    interface ExprAlg<Num, Bool> {
        lit: (value: number) => Num;
        add: (left: Num, right: Num) => Num;
        eq: (left: Num, right: Num) => Bool;
        iff: (interrogee: Bool, then: Num, els: Num) => Num;
    }
    
    const evaluate: ExprAlg<number, boolean> = {
        lit: (value) => value,
        add: (left, right) => left + right,
        eq: (left, right) => left === right,
        iff: (interrogee, then, els) => interrogee ? then : els
    }
    
    function makeExample<Num, Bool>(alg: ExprAlg<Num, Bool>): Num {
        return alg.iff(
            alg.eq(
                alg.add(alg.lit(2), alg.lit(2)),
                alg.lit(4)),
            alg.lit(1),
            alg.lit(2))
    }
    
    console.log(makeExample(evaluate)); // prints 1
    

    For point 2, you are correct that the original Java formulation of object algebras does not support data sort extensibility. I haven’t tried to see if TS’s more powerful generics change this or not.

    For point 3, consider what happens if you want to add a new variant to the data type. In this case, add a Mult variant for multiplication. With GADTs this is not possible without modifying or duplicating the existing evaluation code, but I can do it with object algebras:

    type ExtendedExprAlg<Num, Bool> = ExprAlg<Num, Bool> & {
        mult: (left: Num, right: Num) => Num;
    }
    
    const extendedEvaluate: ExtendedExprAlg<number, boolean> = Object.assign({}, evaluate, {
        mult: (left: number, right: number) => left * right
    })
    
    function makeExtendedExample<Num, Bool>( alg: ExtendedExprAlg<Num, Bool>): Num {
        const one = alg.mult(alg.lit(1), alg.lit(1));
        return alg.iff(
            alg.eq(one, makeExample(alg)),
            alg.lit(3),
            alg.mult(alg.lit(2), alg.lit(2))
        )
    }
    
    console.log(makeExtendedExample(extendedEvaluate)); // prints 3
    

    This is the point of object algebras. ADTs and GADTs can’t do this out of the box; this is the essence of the expression problem and is why more advanced techniques like final tagless encodings and datatypes a la carte exist.