From: "zze-MARCHEGAY Michael stagiaire FTRD/DTL/LAN" <michael.marchegay@rd.francetelecom.com>
To: "Eray Ozkural" <erayo@cs.bilkent.edu.tr>
Cc: <caml-list@inria.fr>
Subject: RE: [Caml-list] Deep copy
Date: Mon, 15 Jul 2002 17:24:57 +0200 [thread overview]
Message-ID: <0489A7888F080B4BA73B53F7E145F29A1B0AF5@LANMHS20.rd.francetelecom.fr> (raw)
> De : Eray Ozkural [mailto:erayo@cs.bilkent.edu.tr]
> Envoyé : lundi 15 juillet 2002 17:03
>
>
> On Monday 15 July 2002 13:06, zze-MARCHEGAY Michael stagiaire
> FTRD/DTL/LAN
> wrote:
> > Hi all,
> >
> > I'm writting a program that manipulates a graph structure
> and I need to
> > make deep copies of some of the graph nodes. The function
> Oo.copy donesn't
> > perform a deep copy and I haven't found any other that
> could make it.
>
> You mean something like creating a new object on the heap and
> copying over the
> contents of an existing object.
>
> If this were C++ all you had to do would be invoking the copy
> constructor
> Node* x = new Node(old_node);
>
> From the documentation OO.copy does look like a deep copy operation:
>
> val copy : < .. > -> < .. >
> Oo.copy o returns a copy of object o, that is a fresh object
> with the same
> methods and instance variables as o
In fact, if an object 'a' contains an attribute 'b' that is another
object, Oo.copy on 'a' gives a copy of 'a' in which the attribute
'b' is **physically** equal to the copied attribute from 'a'.
Example:
class a =
object
val mutable b = new b
method get_b = b
end
and b =
object
val mutable c = "1"
method set_c x = c <- x
method print_c = print_string ("c=" ^ c ^ "\n")
end
let aa = new a
let aa' = Oo.copy aa
let _ =
aa#get_b#set_c "3";
aa#get_b#print_c;
aa'#get_b#print_c
gives:
c=3
c=3
whereas a deep copy would give:
c=3
c=1
>
> Curious,
>
> --
> Eray Ozkural <erayo@cs.bilkent.edu.tr>
> Comp. Sci. Dept., Bilkent University, Ankara
> www: http://www.cs.bilkent.edu.tr/~erayo
> GPG public key fingerprint: 360C 852F 88B0 A745 F31B EA0F
> 7C07 AE16 874D 539C
>
>
-------------------
To unsubscribe, mail caml-list-request@inria.fr Archives: http://caml.inria.fr
Bug reports: http://caml.inria.fr/bin/caml-bugs FAQ: http://caml.inria.fr/FAQ/
Beginner's list: http://groups.yahoo.com/group/ocaml_beginners
next reply other threads:[~2002-07-15 15:24 UTC|newest]
Thread overview: 16+ messages / expand[flat|nested] mbox.gz Atom feed top
2002-07-15 15:24 zze-MARCHEGAY Michael stagiaire FTRD/DTL/LAN [this message]
2002-07-15 15:24 ` Eray Ozkural
2002-07-15 18:18 ` Alessandro Baretta
2002-07-15 19:53 ` Alessandro Baretta
2002-07-15 22:35 ` John Prevost
2002-07-15 23:03 ` Alessandro Baretta
2002-07-16 8:19 ` John Prevost
-- strict thread matches above, loose matches on Subject: below --
2002-07-15 10:06 zze-MARCHEGAY Michael stagiaire FTRD/DTL/LAN
2002-07-15 13:42 ` Ken Wakita
2002-07-15 14:43 ` Eray Ozkural
2002-07-15 15:33 ` Ken Wakita
2002-07-15 23:09 ` Ken Wakita
2002-07-15 15:02 ` Eray Ozkural
2002-07-15 15:27 ` Nicolas Cannasse
2002-07-15 15:40 ` Eray Ozkural
2002-07-15 16:22 ` sebastien FURIC
Reply instructions:
You may reply publicly to this message via plain-text email
using any one of the following methods:
* Save the following mbox file, import it into your mail client,
and reply-to-all from there: mbox
Avoid top-posting and favor interleaved quoting:
https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Posting_style#Interleaved_style
* Reply using the --to, --cc, and --in-reply-to
switches of git-send-email(1):
git send-email \
--in-reply-to=0489A7888F080B4BA73B53F7E145F29A1B0AF5@LANMHS20.rd.francetelecom.fr \
--to=michael.marchegay@rd.francetelecom.com \
--cc=caml-list@inria.fr \
--cc=erayo@cs.bilkent.edu.tr \
/path/to/YOUR_REPLY
https://kernel.org/pub/software/scm/git/docs/git-send-email.html
* If your mail client supports setting the In-Reply-To header
via mailto: links, try the mailto: link
Be sure your reply has a Subject: header at the top and a blank line
before the message body.
This is a public inbox, see mirroring instructions
for how to clone and mirror all data and code used for this inbox