From: Luc Maranget <Luc.Maranget@inria.fr>
To: bpr@best.com (Brian Rogoff)
Cc: Luc.Maranget@inria.fr (Luc Maranget),
skaller@ozemail.com.au (John Max Skaller),
caml-list@inria.fr
Subject: Re: [Caml-list] ocaml and named constants
Date: Thu, 31 May 2001 11:22:50 +0200 (MET DST) [thread overview]
Message-ID: <200105310922.LAA0000007458@beaune.inria.fr> (raw)
In-Reply-To: <Pine.BSF.4.21.0105300940580.19818-100000@shell5.ba.best.com> from "Brian Rogoff" at mai 30, 2001 09:50:13
>
> On Tue, 29 May 2001, Luc Maranget wrote:
> > >
> > > Is there any semantic reason why
> > > one cannot use variables, or even expressions? Apart from
> > > the obvious syntactic problem.
> >
> > Not that obvious, I think this would make pattern-matching look
> > like even more complicated.
> > It is good to stress on the fact that
> > in match .. with p ->, p is a pattern
> > 1. Some value ``whith holes''
> > 2. Something we programmer and compiler know without any computation.
>
> I read a paper on an SML extension to handle this named constant problem,
> here at ftp://ftp.research.bell-labs.com/dist/smlnj/papers/92-tr-aitken.ps
> Anyone know why this or some similar approach hasn't caught on? The CamlP4
> approach isn't too bad, but this seems important enough to be in the core
> language.
>
> This is certainly on my "wish list" for future enhancements, since there
> are so many cases where named constants are useful and the current
> workarounds are a bit ugly.
>
> -- Brian
>
>
I got the reference and the idea (I think).
These are the so-called ``macros (that work!)''
They give you
1- Mandatory optimizations (aka inlining)
2- A different syntax for function and constructor application
both in patterns.
Stuff for making all that cross module boundaries (allowing data
abstraction and pattern-matching to cohabit) looks a bit
complicated and may not be what you want.
But I have another remark
as far a ``manifest constants'' are the issue, Polymorphic
variants
(http://caml.inria.fr/ocaml/htmlman/manual003.html)
seem to do the job.
After all, provided you do not care much about the actual value of Foo)
you can write :
match x with
| `Foo -> ...
| `Bar -> ...
| _ -> ...
In place of
const Foo = 0
const Bar = 1
match x with
| Foo -> ...
| Bar -> ...
| _ -> ...
--Luc
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next prev parent reply other threads:[~2001-05-31 9:22 UTC|newest]
Thread overview: 12+ messages / expand[flat|nested] mbox.gz Atom feed top
2001-05-23 17:06 David Fox
2001-05-28 12:32 ` Xavier Leroy
2001-05-29 1:07 ` John Max Skaller
2001-05-29 12:12 ` Andreas Rossberg
2001-05-29 17:16 ` John Max Skaller
[not found] ` <skaller@ozemail.com.au>
2001-05-30 9:46 ` Wolfgang Lux
2001-05-29 13:50 ` Luc Maranget
2001-05-30 16:50 ` Brian Rogoff
2001-05-31 9:22 ` Luc Maranget [this message]
2001-05-31 16:34 ` Brian Rogoff
2001-06-01 4:39 ` David Fox
2001-06-01 1:45 ` John Max Skaller
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