Article ID | Journal | Published Year | Pages | File Type |
---|---|---|---|---|
438485 | Theoretical Computer Science | 2007 | 17 Pages |
The well-definedness problem for a programming language consists of checking, given an expression and an input type, whether the semantics of the expression is defined for all inputs adhering to the input type. A related problem is the semantic type-checking problem which consists of checking, given an expression, an input type, and an output type whether the expression always returns outputs adhering to the output type on inputs adhering to the input type. Both problems are undecidable for general-purpose programming languages. In this paper we study these problems for the Nested Relational Calculus, a specific-purpose database query language. We also investigate how these problems behave in the presence of programming language features such as singleton coercion and type tests.