2.2 KiB
Only strip optional properties from unsealed tables during subtyping
Status: Implemented
Summary
Currently subtyping allows optional properties to be stripped from table types during subtyping. This RFC proposes only allowing that when the subtype is unsealed and the supertype is sealed.
Motivation
Table types can be sealed or unsealed. These are different in that:
-
Unsealed table types are precise: if a table has unsealed type
{ p: number, q: string }
then it is guaranteed to have only propertiesp
andq
. -
Sealed tables support width subtyping: if a table has sealed type
{ p: number }
then it is guaranteed to have at least propertyp
, so we allow{ p: number, q: string }
to be treated as a subtype of{ p: number }
-
Unsealed tables can have properties added to them: if
t
has unsealed type{ p: number }
then after the assignmentt.q = "hi"
,t
's type is updated to be{ p: number, q: string }
. -
Unsealed tables are subtypes of sealed tables.
Currently we allow subtyping to strip away optional fields as long as the supertype is sealed. This is necessary for examples, for instance:
local t : { p: number, q: string? } = { p = 5, q = "hi" }
t = { p = 7 }
typechecks because { p : number }
is a subtype of
{ p : number, q : string? }
. Unfortunately this is not sound,
since sealed tables support width subtyping:
local t : { p: number, q: string? } = { p = 5, q = "hi" }
local u : { p: number } = { p = 5, q = false }
t = u
Design
The fix for this source of unsoundness is twofold:
- make all table literals unsealed, and
- only allow stripping optional properties from when the supertype is sealed and the subtype is unsealed.
This RFC is for (2). There is a separate RFC for (1).
Drawbacks
This introduces new type errors (it has to, since it is fixing a source of unsoundness). This means that there are now false positives such as:
local t : { p: number, q: string? } = { p = 5, q = "hi" }
local u : { p: number } = { p = 5, q = "lo" }
t = u
These false positives are so similar to sources of unsoundness that it is difficult to see how to allow them soundly.
Alternatives
We could just live with unsoundness.