From: yoann padioleau <padator@wanadoo.fr>
To: David Teller <David.Teller@ens-lyon.org>, caml-list@yquem.inria.fr
Subject: Re: [Caml-list] OO design
Date: Tue, 9 May 2006 00:59:28 +0200 (CEST) [thread overview]
Message-ID: <13757673.1147129168085.JavaMail.www@wwinf1626> (raw)
> Which brings us to a question : how do you enforce protocols in OCaml ?
>
> Say, is there a "good" way of rewriting file-related operations so that, say,
> ProtocolUnix.read and ProtocolUnix.write *statically* only accept opened
> files, and in addition, ProtocolUnix.write only accepts files which have been
> opened with write priviledges ?
Have different types, in_channel and out_channel. But ocaml already have this.
The problem is that when you close a channel, ocaml does not warn you
if you try to read from a close channel.
>
> I mean, there are manners of checking this with, say, model checking tools. In
> the specific case of file management, I guess we can do it with a little bit
> of simple subclassing, but I assume there's a large run-time penalty for this
> extra bit of checking, due to the management of objects by OCaml. Has anyone
> attempted to determine how well this scales up ? Or explored other options ?
Using higher order functions.
Instead of having a open/read/close sequence protocol that you must follow,
enforce such a protocol by defining a higher order function let's say
with_open_out_file that do all that for you under the hood.
with_open_out_file "/tmp/test.txt" (fun write_func ->
(* you can call write_func that do the writing *)
write_func "toto";
write_func "titi";
);
let with_open_out_file file f =
let chan = open_out file in
let read_func = output_string chan in
try (
f read_func;
close_out chan;
)
with
x -> close_out chan; raise x
Note how the channel is automatically closed for you.
This technique is used in Lisp library I think.
next reply other threads:[~2006-05-08 22:59 UTC|newest]
Thread overview: 7+ messages / expand[flat|nested] mbox.gz Atom feed top
2006-05-08 22:59 yoann padioleau [this message]
-- strict thread matches above, loose matches on Subject: below --
2006-05-05 9:35 David Baelde
2006-05-05 10:47 ` [Caml-list] " Gerd Stolpmann
2006-05-05 13:00 ` Remi Vanicat
2006-05-05 19:32 ` Andrej Bauer
2006-05-08 3:17 ` Jacques Garrigue
2006-05-08 21:29 ` David Teller
2006-05-08 21:36 ` Dan Grossman
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