Partial Evaluation
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In
computing Computing is any goal-oriented activity requiring, benefiting from, or creating computing machinery. It includes the study and experimentation of algorithmic processes, and development of both hardware and software. Computing has scientific, ...
, partial evaluation is a technique for several different types of program optimization by specialization. The most straightforward application is to produce new programs that run faster than the originals while being guaranteed to behave in the same way. A
computer program A computer program is a sequence or set of instructions in a programming language for a computer to Execution (computing), execute. Computer programs are one component of software, which also includes software documentation, documentation and oth ...
''prog'' is seen as a mapping of input data into output data: : prog : I_\text \times I_\text \to O, where I_\text, the ''static data'', is the part of the input data known at compile time. The partial evaluator transforms \langle prog, I_\text\rangle into prog^* : I_\text \to O by precomputing all static input at compile time. prog^* is called the "residual program" and should run more efficiently than the original program. The act of partial evaluation is said to "residualize" prog to prog^*.


Futamura projections

A particularly interesting example of the use of partial evaluation, first described in the 1970s by Yoshihiko Futamura, is when ''prog'' is an interpreter for a programming language. If ''I''static is source code designed to run inside that interpreter, then partial evaluation of the interpreter with respect to this data/program produces ''prog''*, a version of the interpreter that only runs that source code, is written in the implementation language of the interpreter, does not require the source code to be resupplied, and runs faster than the original combination of the interpreter and the source. In this case ''prog''* is effectively a compiled version of ''I''static. This technique is known as the first Futamura projection, of which there are three: # Specializing an interpreter for given source code, yielding an executable. # Specializing the specializer for the interpreter (as applied in #1), yielding a compiler. # Specializing the specializer for itself (as applied in #2), yielding a tool that can convert any interpreter to an equivalent compiler. They were described by Futamura in Japanese in 1971 and in English in 1983.


See also

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Compile-time function execution In computing, compile-time function execution (or compile time function evaluation, or general constant expressions) is the ability of a compiler, that would normally compile a function to machine code and execute it at run time, to execute the ...
* Memoization * Partial application * Run-time algorithm specialisation * smn theorem * Strength reduction * Template metaprogramming


References


General references

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External links

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Applying Dynamic Partial Evaluation to dynamic, reflective programming languages
{{DEFAULTSORT:Partial Evaluation Compiler optimizations Evaluation strategy