From: Tom Hirschowitz <tom.hirschowitz@inria.fr>
To: caml-list@inria.fr
Subject: [Caml-list] Pb with type constraints in module
Date: Wed, 19 Feb 2003 11:00:52 +0000 [thread overview]
Message-ID: <15955.25572.723415.666471@paille.inria.fr> (raw)
In-Reply-To: <3E49B9E1.3060106@univ-savoie.fr>
I don't know of any formalization of these "with" contraints, but the
current meaning is that typexpr must be a type in the outer
environment. If the declaration "S with type t = typexpr" is written
in the environment E, typexpr must be a valid type in E (and thus
cannot refer to t). The constraint is then propagated through the
module type S. In fact, "t" here is not exactly considered a type
identifier, but rather an access path into the constrained module
type. So, any reference to t in typexpr is considered a reference to
an upper definition of t, contrarily to what is done in type
declarations.
Therefore, you example is not correct in this setting, since the
references to t are wrong. It should not be too difficult to allow
datatype declarations though, while preserving this semantics, by
having a function for scoping datatypes non-recursively. I am not sure
about the gain of expressive power though, since for instance your
example would remain incorrect.
Last remark: "with" constraints do propagate datatype
declarations, as soon as you use modules instead of types.
For example:
# module A = struct type t = A | B of t end;;
# module type T = sig module A : sig type t end end;;
# module type T' = T with module A = A;;
module type T' = sig module A : sig type t = A.t = A | B of t end end
Cheers.
Christophe Raffalli writes:
>
> Is there a good reason to have this in the grammar
> mod-constraint ::=
> type [type-parameters] typeconstr = typexpr
> | module module-path = extended-module-path
>
> instead of
> mod-constraint ::=
> type typedef
> | module module-path = extended-module-path
>
> Here is an example where this is useful:
>
> Lets say you have a nice module type and functor:
>
> --
> module type Ord =
> sig
> type t
> val compare : t -> t -> int
> end
>
> module F(G:Ord) =
> struct
> type t = Empty | Node of G.t * t * t
> let compare = ... the code you want ...
> end
> --
>
> in a .mli you may want to write
>
> --
> module F : functor (G:Ord) -> Ord
> with type t = Empty | Node of G.t * t * t
> --
>
> And this is not legal because "with type" take a typeexpr and not a
> typedef. This is not very natural, bacause you have to move the
> definition of t outside F like in
> --
> type 'a tree = Empty | Node of 'a * 'a tree * 'a tree
> module F(G:Ord) =
> struct
> type t = G.t tree
> let compare = ... the code you want ...
> end
> --
>
> in a .mli you can now write
> --
> type 'a tree = Empty | Node of 'a * 'a tree * 'a tree
> module F : functor (G:Ord) -> Ord with type t = G.t tree
> --
>
> The same happends if you use recursive type
> --
> module F : functor (G:Ord) -> Ord with type t = (G.t * t) list
> --
> is not legal either.
>
> --
> Christophe Raffalli
> Université de Savoie
> Batiment Le Chablais, bureau 21
> 73376 Le Bourget-du-Lac Cedex
>
> tél: (33) 4 79 75 81 03
> fax: (33) 4 79 75 87 42
> mail: Christophe.Raffalli@univ-savoie.fr
> www: http://www.lama.univ-savoie.fr/~RAFFALLI
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next prev parent reply other threads:[~2003-02-19 11:43 UTC|newest]
Thread overview: 4+ messages / expand[flat|nested] mbox.gz Atom feed top
2003-02-11 20:02 [Caml-list] fermer un listbox, (ou detruire ) deerf hal
2003-02-12 3:05 ` [Caml-list] Pb with type constraints in module Christophe Raffalli
2003-02-19 11:00 ` Tom Hirschowitz [this message]
2003-02-19 11:49 ` Tom Hirschowitz
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