Because I have been learning about Type Theory, I have become much more aware of and interested in Functional Programming.
If you are unfamiliar with functional programming, Real World Haskell describes functional programming like this:
In Haskell [and other functional languages], we de-emphasise code that modifies data. Instead, we focus on functions that take immutable values as input and produce new values as output. Given the same inputs, these functions always return the same results. This is a core idea behind functional programming.
Along with not modifying data, our Haskell functions usually don't talk to the external world; we call these functions pure. We make a strong distinction between pure code and the parts of our programs that read or write files, communicate over network connections, or make robot arms move. This makes it easier to organize, reason about, and test our programs.
Because of this functional languages have a number of interesting differences with traditional programming. In functional programming:
- Programming is lot more like math. Programs are often elegant and terse.
- It is much easier to reason about programs, including proving things about them (termination, lack of errors etc.). This means compilers have much more room to automatically optimize a program, automatically parallelizing code, merging repeated operations etc.
- Static typing helps (and requires) you find and correct a large fraction of trivial bugs without running the program.
- Pure code means doing things with side effects (like I/O) requires significantly more thought to start to understand, but also makes side effects more explicit.
- Program evaluation is defined much more directly on the syntax of the language.
I already read that article before making my comment. It says, "Type inference refers to the ability to deduce automatically the type of a value in a programming language." And Perl does that. Perl therefore does type inference.
Perl doesn't use the Hindley-Milner algorithm, which that article says was "the algorithm first used to perform type inference". Not "the only way to do type inference."
More importantly, my question about type inference is a child of my question about why this is called a property of functional programming languages. A language doesn't have to be functional to do type inference, and a functional language doesn't have to do type inference. LISP doesn't do type inference. So why do people bring up type inference when defining functional programming?
Indeed, but what Perl does still isn't type inference; type inference is something done at compile time, and doesn't really make sense outside of a static type system. The first-sentence summary of a Wikipedia article should not be taken as a definition.