From: Pierre Weis <Pierre.Weis@inria.fr>
To: garrigue@kurims.kyoto-u.ac.jp (Jacques Garrigue)
Cc: Pierre.Weis@inria.fr, caml-list@inria.fr
Subject: Re: [Caml-list] let mutable (was OCaml Speed for Block Convolutions)
Date: Tue, 12 Jun 2001 09:43:07 +0200 (MET DST) [thread overview]
Message-ID: <200106120743.JAA25545@pauillac.inria.fr> (raw)
In-Reply-To: <20010612122114X.garrigue@kurims.kyoto-u.ac.jp> from Jacques Garrigue at "Jun 12, 101 12:21:14 pm"
> From: Pierre Weis <Pierre.Weis@inria.fr>
>
> > > > This construction would have introduced the notion of
> > > > Lvalue in Caml, thus introducing some additional semantics complexity,
> > > > and a new notion to explain to beginners.
> > >
> > > Lvalues already exist in Ocaml (and have to be explained to
> > > beginners), for example : "a.(i) <- a.(i)+1".
> >
> > I'm afraid this is wrong.
> >
> > The syntactic construction e1.(e2) <- e3 is a short hand for a
> > function call: Array.set e1 e2 e3. Once more there is no Lvalue here,
> > just a regular function call (hence you can write arbitrary complex
> > expressions in place of e1, provided it returns an array value).
> >
> > I'm a bit surprised that you feel it necessary to explain the notion
> > of Lvalue to beginners when there is no such notion in the language !
>
> You can of course explain the semantics this way, but most people
> apparently consider that there are lvalues in ocaml, just that they
> are very restricted. It is certainly much simpler to explain than
> lvalues in C!
Most people consider Caml as a toy language, since it is not a
mainstream language. As a computer science researcher fond of riguour,
I certainly will not organize a vote to find out if ``most people
apparently consider'' something, to decide that this something is
true.
A more interesting contribution would be to give evidences that
references and arrays and other imperative features are indeed built
with lvalues in Caml.
> Also, there is one unique case currently which can only be explained
> by the distinction lvalue/rvalue: instance variables in objects.
>
> class counter = object
> val mutable x = 0
> method get = x
> method bump = x <- x + 1
> end
>
> How can you explain the method bump without the notion of lvalue?
I can't and I just consider the introduction of lvalues to model
states in objects as a flaw in the design of this feature (and I
certainly never have promoted it). Reintroduction of lvalues just for
this questionable facility is an error.
> Perfectly coherent answers would be, let's remove mutable instance
> variables, or force the notation self.x to access variables.
Yes. That's what we should have done, since we love perfectly coherent
answers for Caml.
> Another answer is that people so fond of objects have already heared
> of lvalues anyway.
So what ?
I cannot consider such a vague argument as a satisfactory answer to an
important language design decision, since this ``answer'' is not a
language design consideration. If we were using this kind of general
public oriented reasons as guidelines to develop the semantics of the
language, you could imagine I could state that ``people so fond of
objects have already heared of bus error anyway'', which is also true
I'm afraid, to justify the introduction of a feature that would cause
some bus errors from time to time!
> the problem is not only with lvalues either. With for loops, you have
> a case of rvalue, where something which is not syntactically a
> function have a changing variable, which is accessed directly. The
> fact you cannot change it yourself is not relevant.
What do you mean here ? A for loop being just a shorthand for the
definition of a function, I don't see the problem...
Best regards,
Pierre Weis
INRIA, Projet Cristal, Pierre.Weis@inria.fr, http://pauillac.inria.fr/~weis/
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next prev parent reply other threads:[~2001-06-12 7:43 UTC|newest]
Thread overview: 44+ messages / expand[flat|nested] mbox.gz Atom feed top
2001-06-04 13:25 [Caml-list] OCaml Speed for Block Convolutions David McClain
2001-06-04 19:51 ` William Chesters
2001-06-04 20:05 ` Chris Hecker
2001-06-04 20:15 ` David McClain
2001-06-04 22:34 ` Markus Mottl
2001-06-06 20:13 ` William Chesters
2001-06-06 22:29 ` Chris Hecker
2001-06-07 7:42 ` William Chesters
2001-06-05 7:22 ` Chris Hecker
2001-06-06 6:27 ` David McClain
2001-06-04 22:14 ` Tom _
2001-06-04 22:57 ` Chris Hecker
2001-06-05 2:52 ` Brian Rogoff
2001-06-05 15:02 ` Stefan Monnier
2001-06-05 10:48 ` Tom _
2001-06-06 2:03 ` Hugo Herbelin
2001-06-06 4:04 ` Charles Martin
2001-06-06 18:25 ` William Chesters
2001-06-06 18:35 ` William Chesters
2001-06-06 18:40 ` Patrick M Doane
2001-06-07 1:50 ` Hugo Herbelin
2001-06-07 18:20 ` Tom _
2001-06-07 23:49 ` [Caml-list] let mutable (was OCaml Speed for Block Convolutions) Jacques Garrigue
2001-06-08 0:20 ` [Caml-list] Currying in Ocaml Mark Wotton
2001-06-08 10:13 ` Anton Moscal
[not found] ` <Pine.LNX.4.21.0106081015000.1167-100000@hons.cs.usyd.edu.a u>
2001-06-08 0:38 ` Chris Hecker
2001-06-08 8:25 ` [Caml-list] let mutable (was OCaml Speed for Block Convolutions) Ohad Rodeh
2001-06-08 15:21 ` Brian Rogoff
2001-06-08 17:30 ` Pierre Weis
2001-06-08 18:36 ` Stefan Monnier
2001-06-08 19:07 ` Pierre Weis
2001-06-08 19:30 ` Michel Quercia
2001-06-11 6:42 ` [Caml-list] should "a.(i)" be a reference? (was "let mutable") Judicaël Courant
2001-06-11 13:42 ` [Caml-list] let mutable (was OCaml Speed for Block Convolutions) Pierre Weis
2001-06-12 3:21 ` Jacques Garrigue
2001-06-12 7:43 ` Pierre Weis [this message]
2001-06-12 8:31 ` Jacques Garrigue
2001-06-12 13:15 ` Georges Brun-Cottan
2001-06-12 21:54 ` John Max Skaller
2001-06-15 9:55 ` Michael Sperber [Mr. Preprocessor]
2001-06-08 9:00 Dave Berry
2001-06-08 10:23 Dave Berry
2001-06-15 3:20 Don Syme
2001-06-15 16:05 Dave Berry
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