Uniqueness type

In computing, a unique type guarantees that an object is used in a single-threaded way, with at most a single reference to it. If a value has a unique type, a function applied to it can be optimized to update the value in-place in the object code. Such in-place updates improve the efficiency of functional languages while maintaining referential transparency. Unique types can also be used to integrate functional and imperative programming.

Introduction
Uniqueness typing is best explained using an example. Consider a function  that reads the next line of text from a given file:

Now  reads the next line from the file using an OS-level system call which has the side effect of changing the current position in the file. But this violates referential transparency because calling it multiple times with the same argument will return different results each time as the current position in the file gets moved. This in turn makes  violate referential transparency because it calls.

However, using uniqueness typing, we can construct a new version of  that is referentially transparent even though it's built on top of a function that's not referentially transparent: The  declaration specifies that the type of   is unique; that is to say that   may never be referred to again by the caller of   after   returns, and this restriction is enforced by the type system. And since  does not return   itself but rather a new, different file object , this means that it's impossible for   to be called with   as an argument ever again, thus preserving referential transparency while allowing for side effects to occur.

Programming languages
Uniqueness types are implemented in functional programming languages such as Clean, Mercury, SAC and Idris. They are sometimes used for doing I/O operations in functional languages in lieu of monads.

A compiler extension has been developed for the Scala programming language which uses annotations to handle uniqueness in the context of message passing between actors.

Relationship to linear typing
A unique type is very similar to a linear type, to the point that the terms are often used interchangeably, but there is in fact a distinction: actual linear typing allows a non-linear value to be typecast to a linear form, while still retaining multiple references to it. Uniqueness guarantees that a value has no other references to it, while linearity guarantees that no more references can be made to a value.

Linearity and uniqueness can be seen as particularly distinct when in relation to non-linearity and non-uniqueness modalities, but can then also be unified in a single type system.