Filling typed holes with live GUIs

20Citations
Citations of this article
8Readers
Mendeley users who have this article in their library.

Abstract

Text editing is powerful, but some types of expressions are more naturally represented and manipulated graphically. Examples include expressions that compute colors, music, animations, tabular data, plots, diagrams, and other domain-specific data structures. This paper introduces live literals, or livelits, which allow clients to fill holes of types like these by directly manipulating a user-defined GUI embedded persistently into code. Uniquely, livelits are compositional: a livelit GUI can itself embed spliced expressions, which are typed, lexically scoped, and can in turn embed other livelits. Livelits are also uniquely live: a livelit can provide continuous feedback about the run-time implications of the client's choices even when splices mention bound variables, because the system continuously gathers closures associated with the hole that the livelit is filling. We integrate livelits into Hazel, a live hole-driven programming environment, and describe case studies that exercise these novel capabilities. We then define a simply typed livelit calculus, which specifies how livelits operate as live graphical macros. The metatheory of macro expansion has been mechanized in Agda.

Cite

CITATION STYLE

APA

Omar, C., Moon, D., Blinn, A., Voysey, I., Collins, N., & Chugh, R. (2021). Filling typed holes with live GUIs. In Proceedings of the ACM SIGPLAN Conference on Programming Language Design and Implementation (PLDI) (pp. 511–525). Association for Computing Machinery. https://doi.org/10.1145/3453483.3454059

Register to see more suggestions

Mendeley helps you to discover research relevant for your work.

Already have an account?

Save time finding and organizing research with Mendeley

Sign up for free