* weird type behavior @ 2006-10-28 15:49 Kirill 2006-10-28 16:12 ` [Caml-list] " Richard Jones 0 siblings, 1 reply; 7+ messages in thread From: Kirill @ 2006-10-28 15:49 UTC (permalink / raw) To: caml-list Hi everyone, I'm a novice user of OCaml and functional languages in general. While playing with the interpreter, writing all kinds of functions, I've run into a behavior that doesn't look quite right to me. Please excuse me, if it is explained somewhere and I simply haven't gotten there yet. In the following example, I define a simple function foo that returns function bar, which, in turn, accepts 2 parameters. The weird part is that after bar is being called for the first time, its signature changes from polymorphic types to ints. Right after (foo 3) call it's '_a -> '_b -> '_b = <fun> But after being called, it becomes (int -> int) -> int -> int = <fun> # let foo n = let bar f x = x in bar;; val foo : 'a -> 'b -> 'c -> 'c = <fun> # let inc x = x + 1;; val inc : int -> int = <fun> # let z = foo 3;; val z : '_a -> '_b -> '_b = <fun> # z inc 0;; - : int = 0 # z;; - : (int -> int) -> int -> int = <fun> I have also noticed that if foo doesn't accept parameters, everything works as expected: # let foo = let bar f x = x in bar;; val foo : 'a -> 'b -> 'b = <fun> # let inc x = x + 1;; val inc : int -> int = <fun> # let z = foo;; val z : 'a -> 'b -> 'b = <fun> # z inc 0;; - : int = 0 # z;; - : 'a -> 'b -> 'b = <fun> I have tried this with 3.09.2 and 3.09.3 on X64 Ubuntu. I have also noticed other things I don't see explanation for, but they may be connected to this one. Will be grateful for any explanation. Thanks, -Kirill ^ permalink raw reply [flat|nested] 7+ messages in thread
* Re: [Caml-list] weird type behavior 2006-10-28 15:49 weird type behavior Kirill @ 2006-10-28 16:12 ` Richard Jones 2006-10-28 17:17 ` Kirill ` (2 more replies) 0 siblings, 3 replies; 7+ messages in thread From: Richard Jones @ 2006-10-28 16:12 UTC (permalink / raw) To: Kirill; +Cc: caml-list On Sat, Oct 28, 2006 at 05:49:08PM +0200, Kirill wrote: > I'm a novice user of OCaml and functional languages in general. While > playing with the interpreter, writing all kinds of functions, I've run > into a behavior that doesn't look quite right to me. Please excuse me, > if it is explained somewhere and I simply haven't gotten there yet. > > In the following example, I define a simple function foo that returns > function bar, which, in turn, accepts 2 parameters. The weird part is > that after bar is being called for the first time, its signature changes > from polymorphic types to ints. Right after (foo 3) call it's > '_a -> '_b -> '_b = <fun> > But after being called, it becomes > (int -> int) -> int -> int = <fun> Type variables like '_a are covered here: http://caml.inria.fr/pub/old_caml_site/FAQ/FAQ_EXPERT-eng.html#variables_de_types_faibles There's a mailing list for beginners' questions: http://tech.groups.yahoo.com/group/ocaml_beginners/ Rich. -- Richard Jones, CTO Merjis Ltd. Merjis - web marketing and technology - http://merjis.com Internet Marketing and AdWords courses - http://merjis.com/courses - NEW! Merjis blog - http://blog.merjis.com - NEW! ^ permalink raw reply [flat|nested] 7+ messages in thread
* Re: [Caml-list] weird type behavior 2006-10-28 16:12 ` [Caml-list] " Richard Jones @ 2006-10-28 17:17 ` Kirill [not found] ` <20061028161506.GA2596@furbychan.cocan.org> 2006-10-29 10:03 ` Boris Yakobowski 2 siblings, 0 replies; 7+ messages in thread From: Kirill @ 2006-10-28 17:17 UTC (permalink / raw) To: caml-list (resending to the mailing list - sorry for the duplicate message) Hello Richard and thanks for your answer. This does explain quite a bit, but I am still stuck with other, seemingly related, problems, which I think are too complex for beginners' list, so I'll post it here in hope someone has an answer. What I was really trying to do is learn Church's lambda arithmetic by implementing it in Ocaml. The things went quite well, until I approached PRED operation, for which results turned out to be unexpected. I won't post here all functions in the program - only the 3 most important ones. I'm sure no one here will have problems with car, cdr and cons functions. let rec create_Lnum = function | 0 -> let num f x = x in num | n -> let prev = create_Lnum (n-1) in let num f x = f (prev f x) in num ;; let succ lnum = let num f x = f (lnum f x) in num ;; let pred lnum = let calc_last_pair = lnum ( let next_pair pair = let curr = car pair in cons (succ curr) curr in next_pair ) ( let first_pair = let zero = create_Lnum 0 in cons zero zero in first_pair ) in cdr calc_last_pair ;; Now, there are many things that don't work right when I'm trying to use the above code, so I'll just throw the first one right off and let's see, where it gets us. For this, I'll define a short helper function inc: # let inc x = x + 1;; val inc : int -> int = <fun> Now I create a lambda number and use inc function to make sure it really calls inc 5 times: # let five = create_Lnum 5;; val five : ('_a -> '_a) -> '_a -> '_a = <fun> # five inc 10;; - : int = 15 # five;; - : (int -> int) -> int -> int = <fun> So far, so good, everything worked as expected. I repeat the same thing, but now also get a five's predecessor: # let five = create_Lnum 5;; val five : ('_a -> '_a) -> '_a -> '_a = <fun> # let four = pred five;; val four : ('_a -> '_a) -> '_a -> '_a = <fun> # five inc 10;; This expression has type int -> int but is here used with type (((('a -> 'a) -> 'a -> 'a) -> (('a -> 'a) -> 'a -> 'a) -> ('a -> 'a) -> 'a -> 'a) -> ('a -> 'a) -> 'a -> 'a) -> ((('a -> 'a) -> 'a -> 'a) -> (('a -> 'a) -> 'a -> 'a) -> ('a -> 'a) -> 'a -> 'a) -> ('a -> 'a) -> 'a -> 'a It doesn't work now, and the error message isn't really helpful =( Q1: why? Q2: how can I make it work in the expected way? Thanks in advance, -Kirill On Sat, 2006-10-28 at 17:12 +0100, Richard Jones wrote: > On Sat, Oct 28, 2006 at 05:49:08PM +0200, Kirill wrote: > > I'm a novice user of OCaml and functional languages in general. While > > playing with the interpreter, writing all kinds of functions, I've run > > into a behavior that doesn't look quite right to me. Please excuse me, > > if it is explained somewhere and I simply haven't gotten there yet. > > > > In the following example, I define a simple function foo that returns > > function bar, which, in turn, accepts 2 parameters. The weird part is > > that after bar is being called for the first time, its signature changes > > from polymorphic types to ints. Right after (foo 3) call it's > > '_a -> '_b -> '_b = <fun> > > But after being called, it becomes > > (int -> int) -> int -> int = <fun> > > Type variables like '_a are covered here: > > http://caml.inria.fr/pub/old_caml_site/FAQ/FAQ_EXPERT-eng.html#variables_de_types_faibles > > There's a mailing list for beginners' questions: > > http://tech.groups.yahoo.com/group/ocaml_beginners/ > > Rich. > ^ permalink raw reply [flat|nested] 7+ messages in thread
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* Re: [Caml-list] weird type behavior [not found] ` <1162083950.23148.58.camel@nfnl> @ 2006-10-29 1:12 ` Kirill 2006-10-29 1:34 ` Kirill 2006-10-29 5:07 ` skaller 0 siblings, 2 replies; 7+ messages in thread From: Kirill @ 2006-10-29 1:12 UTC (permalink / raw) To: Richard Jones; +Cc: caml-list Hi, Unfortunately, I wasn't able to infer, how to solve my problem from the FAQ, nor from other sources. I can see that partial application somehow interferes with polymorphism, and partial application does look necessary for my task. Does it mean it's completely impossible in OCaml? Or is there still some way to overcome the problem? -Kirill On Sun, 2006-10-29 at 03:05 +0200, Kirill wrote: > On Sat, 2006-10-28 at 17:15 +0100, Richard Jones wrote: > > I think the answer to the second part of your question is here: > > > > http://caml.inria.fr/resources/doc/faq/core.en.html#eta-expansion > > > > Rich. > > ^ permalink raw reply [flat|nested] 7+ messages in thread
* Re: [Caml-list] weird type behavior 2006-10-29 1:12 ` Kirill @ 2006-10-29 1:34 ` Kirill 2006-10-29 5:07 ` skaller 1 sibling, 0 replies; 7+ messages in thread From: Kirill @ 2006-10-29 1:34 UTC (permalink / raw) To: caml-list Here's the same code as in my second message, in shorter and arguably more readable form. createln function creates a Church's "lambda number". succ and pred, respectively, produce successive and preceding numbers to the given. let rec createln = function | 0 -> fun f x -> x | n -> fun f x -> f (createln (n-1) f x) ;; let succ lnum f x = f (lnum f x);; let pred lnum = let calc_last_pair = lnum ( fun pair -> let curr = car pair in cons (succ curr) curr ) ( cons (createln 0) (createln 0) ) in cdr calc_last_pair ;; On Sun, 2006-10-29 at 03:12 +0200, Kirill wrote: > Hi, > > Unfortunately, I wasn't able to infer, how to solve my problem from the > FAQ, nor from other sources. I can see that partial application somehow > interferes with polymorphism, and partial application does look > necessary for my task. Does it mean it's completely impossible in OCaml? > Or is there still some way to overcome the problem? > > -Kirill > > > On Sun, 2006-10-29 at 03:05 +0200, Kirill wrote: > > On Sat, 2006-10-28 at 17:15 +0100, Richard Jones wrote: > > > I think the answer to the second part of your question is here: > > > > > > http://caml.inria.fr/resources/doc/faq/core.en.html#eta-expansion > > > > > > Rich. > > > ^ permalink raw reply [flat|nested] 7+ messages in thread
* Re: [Caml-list] weird type behavior 2006-10-29 1:12 ` Kirill 2006-10-29 1:34 ` Kirill @ 2006-10-29 5:07 ` skaller 1 sibling, 0 replies; 7+ messages in thread From: skaller @ 2006-10-29 5:07 UTC (permalink / raw) To: Kirill; +Cc: Richard Jones, caml-list On Sun, 2006-10-29 at 03:12 +0200, Kirill wrote: > Hi, > > Unfortunately, I wasn't able to infer, how to solve my problem from the > FAQ, nor from other sources. I can see that partial application somehow > interferes with polymorphism, and partial application does look > necessary for my task. Does it mean it's completely impossible in OCaml? > Or is there still some way to overcome the problem? A limitation of Hindley-Milner type inference: you cannot pass a polymorphic function to a function. The Ocaml run-time supports this fine, but the type inference engine is only able to cope with universal quantification. [To be clear: the Ocaml *type system* allows it but the inference engine cannot infer it and there's currently no way to override the inference engine: a coercion would be unsafe, and an annotation on the argument is a constraint applied after inference so doesn't help] So when you DO pass a polymorphic function to a function, it is specialised (monomorphised) inside the function, depending on its use. For example: # let g x = x,x in let f g x y = g x, g y in f g 1 1.2;; This expression has type float but is here used with type int # let g x = x,x in g 1, g 1.2;; - : (int * int) * (float * float) = ((1, 1), (1.2, 1.2)) The function g really is polymorphic here, but not inside f. The notation '_a generally means this monormorphised version of type variable 'a: it happens to be 'int' in the first example, so the system prints that instead: '_a means 'some ground type we don't know' as opposed to 'a which means 'any type'. Ocaml will allow you to pass a polymorphic function provided you wrap it in a class or record: # type poly = { h : 'a . 'a -> 'a * 'a };; type poly = { h : 'a. 'a -> 'a * 'a; } You can see here the quantifier 'a . is localised to the record field. Note the type 'poly' is in fact quite monomorphic -- there's no type parameter, one of the fields just happens to be a polymorphic function. # let g x = x,x in let f k x y = k.h x, k.h y in f {h=g} 1 1.2;; - : (int * int) * (float * float) = ((1, 1), (1.2, 1.2)) -- John Skaller <skaller at users dot sf dot net> Felix, successor to C++: http://felix.sf.net ^ permalink raw reply [flat|nested] 7+ messages in thread
* Re: [Caml-list] weird type behavior 2006-10-28 16:12 ` [Caml-list] " Richard Jones 2006-10-28 17:17 ` Kirill [not found] ` <20061028161506.GA2596@furbychan.cocan.org> @ 2006-10-29 10:03 ` Boris Yakobowski 2 siblings, 0 replies; 7+ messages in thread From: Boris Yakobowski @ 2006-10-29 10:03 UTC (permalink / raw) To: Richard Jones On Sat, Oct 28, 2006 at 05:12:27PM +0100, Richard Jones wrote: > Type variables like '_a are covered here: > > http://caml.inria.fr/pub/old_caml_site/FAQ/FAQ_EXPERT-eng.html#variables_de_types_faibles Note that on this particular topic the new faq is slightly more up-to-date, as it covers the use of objetcs or polymorphic recors to emulate first-order polymorphism. http://caml.inria.fr/resources/doc/faq/core.en.html#typing (section "How to write a function with polymorphic arguments?", as well as the two previous ones). -- Boris ^ permalink raw reply [flat|nested] 7+ messages in thread
end of thread, other threads:[~2006-10-30 8:06 UTC | newest] Thread overview: 7+ messages (download: mbox.gz / follow: Atom feed) -- links below jump to the message on this page -- 2006-10-28 15:49 weird type behavior Kirill 2006-10-28 16:12 ` [Caml-list] " Richard Jones 2006-10-28 17:17 ` Kirill [not found] ` <20061028161506.GA2596@furbychan.cocan.org> [not found] ` <1162083950.23148.58.camel@nfnl> 2006-10-29 1:12 ` Kirill 2006-10-29 1:34 ` Kirill 2006-10-29 5:07 ` skaller 2006-10-29 10:03 ` Boris Yakobowski
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