

Type Theory Forall
Pedro Abreu
An accessible podcast about Type Theory, Programming Languages Research and related
topics.
topics.
Episodes
Mentioned books

Mar 25, 2026 • 1h 53min
#60 Conversations on Life, AI, and the PL Job Market - Pedro and Dan
In this episode me and Dan Plyukhin get together to have a heartfelt conversation. We start by talking about our experiences with meditation, and how it has helped us to have a more balanced work-life experience. Then the conversation shifts to comment about the current situation of the job market. Both in academia and in industry. We talk about strategies to reach out to professors and our view on the use of AI in general, and of course we talk about our current research interests.
Links
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Any donations are highly appreciated! Link to Ko-Fi
Dan's Website

Jan 28, 2026 • 2h 47min
#59 Category Theory and Inclusivity - Valeria de Paiva
In this episode of the Type Theory Forall podcast, we are joined by Valeria de Paiva, a Brazilian mathematician and logician whose work has had a lasting influence on category theory, type theory, and the foundations of logic. She is also a co-founder of the Topos Institute, where she continues to explore deep connections between mathematics, logic, computation, and the sciences.
Valeria completed her PhD at Cambridge in the mid-1980s. Even today, pursuing an academic career abroad from Brazil is challenging; doing so at that time — and as a woman — required exceptional determination and resilience. Her trajectory alone already makes her an inspiring figure in the field.
This episode is one of the most technically focused conversations on category theory we have ever had on TTFA. Coming from a strong mathematics background, Valeria has worked extensively on categorical semantics, logical interpretations, and the interface between logic, computation, and language. As a result, the discussion goes deep into categorical ideas and their role in type theory.
Valeria is also the founder of the Women in Logic initiative, which enabled a serious and thoughtful discussion about gender inequality in logic, type theory, and computer science. The conversation is grounded not only in abstract principles, but in decades of concrete work building communities, workshops, and long-lasting support structures for women in the field.
Overall, this episode brings together technical depth, personal history, and a broader reflection on what it means to build a healthier and more inclusive research culture in logic and programming languages.
🔗 Links
👩🏫 Valeria de Paiva
Website
Twitter / X
Women in Logic
Topos Institute
📚 Type Theory Forall
TTFA Store
Patreon

Dec 16, 2025 • 2h 19min
#58 Constructivism and Computational Content - Andrej Bauer
Andrej Bauer has done his PhD at CMU under Dana Scott, and he stands right on the edge between mathematics and computer science. During our conversation it just feels that he can just go on in depth about any topic remotely related to Type Theory and Programming Languages.
Andrej is the person who organized for the The Proof Assistants stack exchange. He has an incredible blog that’s always a great resource to learn Type Theory and Programming Languages Theory. He also has an incredible series of summer school lectures on effect handlers.
But more specifically today we talk about Constructivism, Dialectica, Effect Handlers and AI. I’m sure you guys are gonna love it!
Links
Andrej's Website
Andrej's Blog

Dec 6, 2025 • 59min
#57 Compilers for Privacy-Preserving Computation, Category Theory, and Keeping a Good Rythm in your PhD - Raghav Malik
Raghav Malik, has just defended his PhD on the topic of compilers for privacy-preserving computation, and that's a good chunk of our conversation.
He has also spent some years in grad school going down the rabbit hole to actually learn Category Theory in depth and from first principles, so I was deieing to ask him if category theory is really all that to learn the foundations of PL. In other words, does learning category theory really make you a better PL researcher?
Then, of course, I wouldn’t finish this episode without asking him how he coped with Mental Health during his PhD Journey.
Links
Raghav's Website
TTFA Patreon
TTFA Merch Store
TTFA Ko-Fi

Nov 17, 2025 • 1h 36min
#56 Property Based Testing and PL Grad School Applications - Francille Zhuang
Francille Zhuang is an undergrad at Purdue University and has been doing research with Benjamin Delaware and Patrick Lafontaine. In this episode we talk about her early research experiences on Property Based Testing, and we go through all the necessary information for applying for graduate school in Programming Languages in the US.
Links
Francille's LinkedIn
TTFA Mentorship Program
TTFA Merch Store
TTFA Patreon
TTFA Ko-Fi

20 snips
Oct 27, 2025 • 2h 38min
#55 The Death of OO, The Beauty of Scheme, BobKonf, and FunArch - Mike Sperber
Mike Sperber, CEO of Active Group and a veteran in functional programming, shares his insights on the evolution of programming languages, particularly Scheme and its role in modern software development. He raises compelling points about the decline of Object-Oriented Programming and discusses the significance of mathematics in programming. Mike also delves into the dynamics of the Scheme R6RS standards committee, the creation of conferences like BobKonf, and the challenges of teaching functional programming effectively in industry settings.

Sep 29, 2025 • 1h 50min
#54 The Goal of Science is to Communicate Ideas! - Philip Wadler
Philip Wadler is a well known, celebrated and recognized researcher in the field especially for his unique ability to explain complex ideas in a simple and elegant way. He got his Bachelor in 1977 at Stanford, his Masters in 1979 and his PhD in 1984 both at CMU. In 2023, he was awarded the distinguished honor of being elected a Fellow of the Royal Society, joining the ranks of scientific greats such as Isaac Newton and Charles Darwin.
Wadler describes himself as someone who likes to bring theory into practice, and practice into theory. In this episode, we talk about his prolific research, the story behind Monads and Type Classes, Category Theory and Homotopy Type Theory.
Throughout our conversation, in response to my eagerness to understand the philosophy and method behind his remarkable papers, he repeatedly emphasizes that the whole point of science is clearly communicating ideas so that others can build upon them.
Links
Wadler's Website
Ullman's Advising Students For Success
Grad School Mentorship
Consider contributing to this show through our ko-fi!

Aug 27, 2025 • 2h 25min
#53 RustBelt, Iris, and the Art of Writing - Derek Dreyer
Derek Dreyer is a professor at the Max Planck Institute, in 2024 he was awarded the ACM Fellowship, in 2017 he got the ACM Sigplan Robin Milner Young Researcher Award. And has participated or lead greatly influential work, such as the RustBelt Project and Iris.
In this episode Derek shares his experience going to Grad School at CMU, how even a great research as himself has fallen pray to the impostor syndrome and how to cope with it. Throughout the conversation he makes beautiful parallels between music and academic papers, and how the work of a researcher is similar to that of an artist an many aspects. He also gives us a few tips about how to become a better academic writer. And of course, we also talked about Rust and the history about formally verifying its type system.
Don't forget to check our merch store!
Links
Derek's Website
POPL '25 PLMW Talk - How to Write Papers so that People Can Read Them

Jul 10, 2025 • 1h 31min
#52 Why is Haskell so special - Lennart Augustsson
Lennart Augustsson has spent the last four decades quietly — and sometimes mischievously — shaping the way we think about code.
He co-authored Lazy ML in the early 80s, wrote A Compiler for LML back in 1984, and was behind HBC, the first publicly available Haskell compiler.
If you've used Haskell, worked with hardware described in Bluespec, or played around with weird combinator-based toy languages, there's a decent chance you've crossed paths with his ideas — directly or indirectly.
He's also won the International Obfuscated C Code Contest — not once, but multiple times — reminding us that playfulness and rigor aren't mutually exclusive.
But his work didn't stop in academia or hobby projects. He’s brought functional programming into finance, hardware design, large-scale industry — with stints at Credit Suisse, Facebook, Google, and now Epic Games, where he’s helping design a new functional logic programming language called Verse.
Over the course of this conversation, we’ll talk about lazy evaluation, type theory, programmable dungeons, the compromises of real-world programming, and what it means to still be building languages after 40 years in the game.
Links
Type Theory Forall Merch Store
Ko-Fi
Discord Server
Haskell Interlude
Lennart's Wikipedia Page
Lennart's Webpage

Jun 4, 2025 • 1h 42min
#51 s/Coq/Rocq - Nicolas Tabareau
In this episode we talk with Nicolas Tabareau, the Head of Gallinette, one of the main teams which develop the Rocq theorem Prover at Inria.
The original idea of this interview is to talk about the rebranding from Coq into Rocq, which is very exciting to our community. However, Nicolas has such a prolific research career that I couldn’t miss the opportunity to get him to talk so much more about it.
So in this conversation we talk about his early publications in neuroscience, his views on Category Theory applied to Type Theory, Rocq’s rebranding, and the institution around it, MetaRocq and the conceptual boundaries of certifying a theory inside itself. Of course we wouldn’t miss the opportunity to also discuss how Rocq view the growing influence that Lean is gaining in our community.
Links
Type Theory Forall Store
Type Theory Forall Website
Nicolas Tabareau Website
MetaRocq Github


