* # types and polymorphic variants
@ 2000-02-24 20:51 Manuel Fahndrich
2000-02-26 14:10 ` Jacques Garrigue
0 siblings, 1 reply; 2+ messages in thread
From: Manuel Fahndrich @ 2000-02-24 20:51 UTC (permalink / raw)
To: 'caml-list@inria.fr'
What is the meaning of #foo, when foo is a polymorphic variant set?
type foo = [`A | `B | `C]
I assumed that it was the following:
#foo = [<`A | `B | `C ]
that is a set containing at most `A | `B | `C. In other words a subtype of
foo.
But consider the following example.
type foo = [`A | `B | `C]
let foo1 (x : #foo as 'a) = x
let y1 = foo1 (`A : [`A])
let foo2 (x : [< `A | `B | `C] as 'a) = x
let y2 = foo2 (`A : [`A])
The complier tells me:
ocamlc -c -i ex1.ml
type foo = [`A|`B|`C]
val foo1 : (#foo as 'a) -> 'a
val y1 : foo
val foo2 : ([<`A|`B|`C] as 'a) -> 'a
val y2 : [`A]
The first function returns me only a foo, the second function returns me
[`A] as expected. Thus my question, what exactly does #foo stand for. I do
understand row variables, but the issue with the lower and upper bounds > <
in variant types seems new. Is there a paper describing these?
I seem to write types of the form [< `A | `B | `C] a lot. Shouldn't there be
an abbreviation for those as well? Maybe #<foo?
Thanks in advance for such a wonderfully expressive type system!
Manuel
^ permalink raw reply [flat|nested] 2+ messages in thread
* Re: # types and polymorphic variants
2000-02-24 20:51 # types and polymorphic variants Manuel Fahndrich
@ 2000-02-26 14:10 ` Jacques Garrigue
0 siblings, 0 replies; 2+ messages in thread
From: Jacques Garrigue @ 2000-02-26 14:10 UTC (permalink / raw)
To: maf; +Cc: caml-list
From: Manuel Fahndrich <maf@microsoft.com>
> What is the meaning of #foo, when foo is a polymorphic variant set?
>
> type foo = [`A | `B | `C]
>
> I assumed that it was the following:
>
> #foo = [<`A | `B | `C ]
>
> that is a set containing at most `A | `B | `C. In other words a subtype of
> foo.
This is correct. Notice however that [> `A | `B | `C] would also be a
subtype of foo (although from a different point of view), so there is
a choice done here between two possibilities, and I took the seemingly
most useful/intuitive.
> But consider the following example.
[...]
It seems that you found a bug in ocaml-2.99. If you are particularly
interested in variants, I suggest you switch to the CVS version.
With the current CVS version it works as you expect:
Objective Caml version 2.99+6 (2000/02/25)
# type foo = [`A|`B|`C];;
type foo = [`A|`B|`C]
# let foo1 (x : #foo) = x;;
val foo1 : (#foo as 'a) -> 'a = <fun>
# let y1 = foo1 (`A : [`A]);;
val y1 : [`A] = `A
# let foo2 (#foo as x) = x;;
val foo2 : #foo -> [>`A|`B|`C] = <fun>
# foo2 (`A : [`A]);;
- : _[>`A|`B|`C] = `A
foo2 shows the difference between the type #foo, and the pattern #foo,
which intuitively accepts all values of type #foo, but also permits
type refinement when combined with "as".
> The first function returns me only a foo, the second function returns me
> [`A] as expected. Thus my question, what exactly does #foo stand for. I do
> understand row variables, but the issue with the lower and upper bounds > <
> in variant types seems new. Is there a paper describing these?
The answer is that your intuition was correct.
You will find a description of variants in "Programming with polymorphic
variants", ML Workshop '98, Baltimore. You can get it from my home
page.
In fact the system in ocaml 3 is a refinement of that, forgetting the
type of a tag when it disappears from the upper bound, but this
shouldn't matter in most cases.
Jacques
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
Jacques Garrigue Kyoto University garrigue at kurims.kyoto-u.ac.jp
<A HREF=http://wwwfun.kurims.kyoto-u.ac.jp/~garrigue/>JG</A>
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