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FunQy: A Next-Generation Quantum Programming Language

FunQy is a novel functional quantum/classical hybrid programming language. Instead of describing algorithms in terms of quantum logic gates, registers, and qubits, FunQy operates purely in terms of functions, values, and states using what we call pattern extraction.

Pattern extraction is a bidirectional analog to pattern matching from classical functional programming, with the additional quantum capability of executing all paths simultaneously. This abstraction provides a clear understanding of the logic and quantum performance benefits of a particular program—instead of executing one path at a time, pattern extraction can execute arbitrary combinations of possible inputs. This tends to be vastly more intuitive and scalable than the prevalent circuit-based algorithm conventions.

Most of the existing "high-level" quantum programming languages are just preprocessors for defining these quantum circuits. FunQy exposes powerful layers of abstraction that are fully independent of the underlying architecture.


Here are a few interesting outcomes of this paradigm:

  • Funqy looks and feels like a high-level programming language, useful for classical software engineers unfamiliar with quantum gates and registers.
  • All states and values are immutable and thus purely functional. This declarative basis for quantum computation is more intuitive, more optimizable, and more powerful than the quantum circuit paradigm.
  • The language is fully architecture-agnostic; qubits and gates are completely invisible to the language unless otherwise desired.
  • Classical and quantum algorithms are defined simultaneously; in other words, the compiler will use the classical version of a function if the input value is correspondingly classical. In effect, only operations which would actually benefit from quantum speed-up are performed on a quantum register.
  • By organizing code in terms of functions and extractions, scripts tend to semantically convey their underlying purpose and logic.
  • On top of "product" space (entanglement/tuples), FunQy unlocks the "sum" space (matrix/vector indices) of a quantum system.
  • It is possible to define non-unitary mappings (i.e. non-square and/or non-reversible matrices), which compile using auxillary qubits as needed.
  • State initializations, repeated measurements, and dynamically adjusted circuits are all implicit to FunQy's semantics. For instance, reusing a state object will automatically reconstruct the state to circumvent the no-cloning principle.
  • FunQy's type system provides the scalability and expressiveness needed to design and reason about algorithms for future (100+ qubit) quantum computers.
  • extract blocks visually demonstrate quantum algorithm speed-up by always having the same time complexity regardless of input value.

Build Requirements

The following command will install the latest version of Rust:

$ curl https://sh.rustup.rs -sSf | sh -s -- --default-toolchain=nightly

Usage Examples

Evaluate a FunQy script:

$ funqy eval path/to/ScriptFile.fqy [-o output_file.txt] [--watch]
$ funqy eval https://some.cdn/file/ScriptFile.fqy [...]
$ funqy eval "raw: measure(sup(1,2,3))" [...]

Start an interactive REPL session:

$ funqy repl [-h history_file.txt]

View all available commands:

$ funqy --help

Qubit Gate Analogy


data Qubit = F | T		//	Define |0⟩ as `F` and |1⟩ as `T`

let (^) = sup			//	Define superposition operator
let (~) = phf			//	Define phase flip operator
let (#) = measure		//	Define measurement operator

// identity (no change)
fn id = {
    F => F,			//	|0⟩ => |0⟩
    T => T,			//	|1⟩ => |1⟩
}

// Pauli-X rotation (NOT gate)
fn px = {
    F => T,			//	|0⟩ => |1⟩
    T => F,			//	|1⟩ => |0⟩
}
let not = px
let (!) = px

// Pauli-Y rotation
fn py = {
    F => @[1/2] T,		//	|0⟩ => |i⟩
    T => @[-1/2] F,		//	|1⟩ => -|i⟩
}

// Pauli-Z rotation
fn pz = {
    F => F,			//	|0⟩ => |0⟩
    T => ~T,		//	|1⟩ => -|1⟩
}

// Hadamard gate
fn hadamard = {
    F => F ^ T, 		//	|0⟩ => (|0⟩ + |1⟩) / sqrt(2)
    T => F ^ ~T,		//	|1⟩ => (|0⟩ - |1⟩) / sqrt(2)
}

// SWAP gate
fn swap = {
    (F, T) => (T, F), 	//	|01⟩ => |10⟩
    (T, F) => (F, T),	//	|10⟩ => |01⟩
}

// sqrt(NOT) gate
let sqrt_not = @[1/2] not

// sqrt(SWAP) gate
let sqrt_swap = @[1/2] swap

// Controlled gate
fn c(gate)(ctrl, tgt) = {
    let out = extract ctrl {
        F => tgt,	//	|0⟩ ⊗ tgt => |0⟩ ⊗ tgt 
        T => gate(tgt),	//	|1⟩ ⊗ tgt => |1⟩ ⊗ gate(tgt)
    }
    (ctrl, out)
}

// Controlled NOT gate
fn cnot(ctrl, tgt) = c(not)(ctrl, tgt)

// Bell state preparation (implemented via gates)
fn bell_as_circuit(q1, q2) = cnot(hadamard(q1), q2)

// Bell state preparation (implemented via extraction)
fn bell_as_extract = {
    (F, F) => (F, F) ^ (T, T),
    (F, T) => (F, T) ^ (T, F),
    (T, F) => (F, F) ^ ~(T, T),
    (T, T) => (F, T) ^ ~(T, F),
}

assert bell_as_circuit == bell_as_extract

let inv_bell = inv(bell_as_circuit)
assert inv(inv_bell) == bell_as_circuit

Note that FunQy is very early in development; this syntax may be subject to change.

The above example demonstrates the crossover between FunQy and traditional quantum computing languages. However, the pattern extraction paradigm gains its advantage from combining different quantum object dimensionalities.

Higher-Order Gate Analogy

Here is an interesting outcome of using both 2D (qubit) and 3D (qutrit) values in a function:


data Axis3 = X | Y | Z

fn rotate(r)(s) = extract r {
    X => px(s)
    Y => py(s)
    Z => pz(s)
}

assert rotate(X) == px
assert rotate(Y) == py
assert rotate(Z) == pz
assert rotate(X ^ Z) == hadamard	// it's back

// assert rotate(^(X, ~Y, @[1/2] Z)) == ...

For more documentation and examples, please check out the tests folder.