package yuujinchou

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yuujinchou: Name Modifiers

Introduction

This library was motivated by the name modifiers in the "import" or "include" statements present in all practical programming languages. Here are a few examples of such statements but without modifiers:

open import M -- Agda
import foo # Python

The ability to import content from other files helps organize code. However, it also poses a new challenge: how could programmers prevent imported content from shadowing existing content? For example, if we already have a function test in the current scope, maybe we do not wish to import another function also named test. To address this, many programming languages allow programmers to selectively hide or rename part of the imported content:

open import M renaming (a to b) public
-- (Agda) renaming a to b, and then re-exporting the content

Another way to address this is to place the imported content under some namespace. For example, in Python,

import math # Python: the sqrt function is available as `math.sqrt`.

Arguably, common designs of these hiding or renaming mechanisms are quite limited. The goal of the yuujinchou library is to provide a compositional calculus of these modifiers of names. Currently, the library supports renaming, scopes, sequencing, unions, and custom hooks for extending the engine.

More Information

What is "yuujinchou"?

"yuujinchou" is the transliteration of "友人帳" in Japanese, which literally means "book of friends". It is a powerful notebook in the manga Natsume Yuujinchou (夏目友人帳) that collects many real names (真名) of youkais (妖怪) (supernatural and spiritual monsters). These real names can be used to summon and control youkais, but the protagonist decided to return the names to their original owners. The plot is about meeting all kinds of youkais.

This magical book will automatically turn to the page with the correct name when the protagonist pictures the youkai in his mind. This package is also about finding real names of youkais.

Notes on the transliteration: "yuujinchou" is in the Wāpuro style so that it uses only the English alphabet; otherwise, its Hepburn romanization would be "Yūjin-chō".

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