Putative Assignment: Symbolic Evaluation of Boolean Expressions in Java

Background

Comp 411 presumes familiarity with functional programming in Scheme and mastery of object-oriented design in Java, most notably how to write functional programs (only involving immutable objects) in Java.  Historically, the courses Comp 210 and 212 (and later Comp 211) covered this material.  Several years ago, the core programming curriculum was revised, de-emphasizing functional programming and object-oriented design.  As a result, it is unclear how well undergraduate students are prepared for this course.   This web page presents a functional programming assignment in Java where the behavior of the Java is specified by a purely functional program in Scheme.   Students who enroll in this course should be comfortable tackling this assignment (taken directly from Comp 211 in Spring 2011).

Overview

Write a Java program BoolSimp.java that reduces boolean expressions (represented in the input and output streams in Scheme-like notation) to simplified form. For the purposes of this assignment, boolean expressions are Scheme expressions constructed from:

  • the symbols T and F denoting the boolean values true and false ;
  • boolean variables (represented by symbols other than T, F, !, &, |, >, and ? that can be bound to either true or false .
  • the unary function ! meaning not .
  • the binary functions &, |, and > denoting and, or, and implies, respectively), and
  • the ternary function ? meaning if .

The shorter names T, F, !, &, |, >, and ? are used instead of true, false, not, and, or, implies, and if for notational brevity which matters in very large inputs.

Some sample inputs are:

  • T
  • F
  • x
  • (! x)
  • (| x (! x))
  • (& x (! x))
  • (> x x)

These formulas are represented internally using abstract syntax (implemented using the composite pattern) as defined in the Java stub file BoolSimp.java.  Only the last four formulas can be simplified; the preceding formulas reduce to themselves.  Some much more complex sample inputs can be found in the file littleData1

The support code for this assignment includes:

  • a Scheme program in the file boolsimp.ss equivalent to the Java program that you are required to write;
  • a Java "stub" file BoolSimp.java for your program that defines a composite hierarchy of "abstract syntax" tree classes rooted in the class Form representing boolean expressions;
  • a Java library file Parser.java containing a class Parser with
    • a read() method that reads a boolean expression represented in "Scheme form" and returns the corresponsing Java Form abstract syntax tree and
    • a reduce() method that composes the visitors you must write in  to reduce whatever formula the Parser instance contains to simplified form.
  • a Java "stub" test file BoolSimpTest.java that includes some rudimentary tests of the code in the BoolSimp.java stub file.

The stub file BoolSimp.java also includes comments showing you exactly what code you have to write to complete writing your simplifier. Of course, you also need to write corresponding tests and add them to the file BoolSimpTest.java.

The file Parser.java is provided to enable you to test your solution on large inputs stored in files. Parser.java includes two Parser constructors Parser(File file) and Parser(String form) for building parsers to parse the boolean expression (in external text form) in the specified File or String, respectively. Since the library class File is defined in the package java.io, you need to insert

import java.io.File;

at the head of a test file that uses the Parser class on the contents of a file.
To construct a Parser for the formula in a file <fileName> you must invoke

new Parser(new File("<fileName>"));

If you omit the new File(...) construction in the argument to Parser and use "<fileName>" instead, you will create a Parser for the String "<fileName>". which is interpreted as a simple boolean variable. The File input format is important because it enables us to conveniently apply your simplifier to formulas that are thousands of symbols long. As a result, you only have to translate the Scheme code in boolsimp.ss into corresponding cleanly-written OO Java code by filling in the gaps in our Java stub file boolSimp.java.  You are expected to appropriately use the composite, interpreter, singleton, and visitor patterns in the code that you write. Since the only stub files that you have to modify are boolSimp.ava and boolSimpTest.java, your assignment is to create expanded versions of these files including a comprehensive test suite in boolSimpTest.java.  Warning:  your program must handle large inputs like large test files provided below.

The Scheme file boolsimp.ss includes Scheme functions parse and unparse to translate Scheme lists into abstract syntax trees and vice-versa. Scheme provides a simple external syntax for lists (consonant with its LISP heritage) but Java does not.  Hence the Java Parser class works on Java strings instead of lists.  The Java visitor class Print in the BoolSimp.java file performs unparsing of the abstract syntax types Form and IfForm to type String.

The Scheme parsing functions rely on the following Scheme data definitions.

Given

(define-struct ! (arg))bigData0
(define-struct & (left right))
(define-struct \| (left right))
(define-struct > (left right))
(define-struct ? (test conseq alt))

a boolExp is either:

  • a boolean constant true and false ;
  • a symbol S representing a boolean variable;
  • (make-Not X) where X is a boolExp ;
  • (make-And X Y) where X and Y are boolExps;
  • (make-Or X Y) where X and Y are boolExps;
  • (make-Implies X Y) where X and Y are boolExps; or
  • (make-If X Y Z) where X, Y, and Z are boolExps.

Note: The or operator must be written as

\|

in Scheme instead of | because | is a metasymbol with a special meaning in Scheme.

Description of the Provided Scheme program

Given a parsed input of type boolExp, the simplification process consists of following four phases:

  • Conversion to if form implemented by the function convert-to-if .
  • Normalization implemented by the function normalize .
  • Symbolic evaluation implemented by the function eval .
  • Conversion back to conventional boolean form implemented by the function convert-to-bool .

These phases are described in detail in HW6 from Comp 211.

Hints on Writing Your Java Code

The Java abstract syntax classes include a separate composite hierarchy (called IfForm) for representing boolean expression as conditionals (the type ifExp in boolsimp.ss). This representation includes only three concrete variant classes, making it much easier to write the visitors that perform normalization, evaluation, and clean-up.

The visitor pattern is a straightforward but notationally involved alternative to the interpreter pattern.  If you do not have much experience writing and debugging Java code involving visitors, we suggest that you write a solution using the interpreter pattern first and then translate your interpreter pattern code to visitor pattern code. (Perhaps IDEs like Eclipse should support such transformations.)

Support Code

Here are the links for the files:

Sample Input Files

The following files contain large formulas that can be reduced by your simplifier. Only the files named bigData x may require a larger thread stack size than the JVM default on most platforms. NOTE: to handle the files bigData0 and bigData1, you may need to pass the JVM argument -Xss64M for the Interactions JVM using the DrJava Preferences command on the Edit menu. The JVM argument setting can be found on the last panel (called JVMs) in the Preferences categories tree.

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