We describe the implementation of first-class polymorphic delimited continuations in the programming language Scala. We use Scala's pluggable typing architecture to implement a simple type and effect system, which discriminates expressions with control effects from those without and accurately tracks answer type modification incurred by control effects. To tackle the problem of implementing first-class continuations under the adverse conditions brought upon by the Java VM, we employ a selective CPS transform, which is driven entirely by effect-annotated types and leaves pure code in direct style. Benchmarks indicate that this high-level approach performs competitively.
Scala is a powerful language that supports a variety of features, but it lacks virtual traits. Virtual traits are classvalued object attributes and can be redefined within subtraits. They support higher-order hierarchies and family polymorphism. This work introduces virtual traits into Scala and explains how to encode virtual traits on top of existing Scala features. We have implemented this encoding using Scala annotation macros and have conducted two small case studies.
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