From: Jacques Garrigue <garrigue@math.nagoya-u.ac.jp>
To: micha-1@fantasymail.de
Cc: caml-list@yquem.inria.fr
Subject: Re: [Caml-list] question about how to bind c++ classes to ocaml
Date: Mon, 14 Aug 2006 17:45:01 +0900 (JST) [thread overview]
Message-ID: <20060814.174501.82090269.garrigue@math.nagoya-u.ac.jp> (raw)
In-Reply-To: <20060814071715.183780@gmx.net>
From: "Michael Wohlwend" <micha-1@fantasymail.de>
> > Calls from ocaml to C are very cheap. If your access function doesn't
> > do any allocation (i.e. never calls the GC), you can even make it
> > faster by marking it as "noalloc". Beware many functions do
> > allocate, including copy_double or copy_string.
>
> thanks for pointing this out. The "noalloc"-thing isn't really
> described in the docu? :-)
I suppose this is because it is a bit tricky. You have to look at all
the dependencies to be sure that the function will never trigger the
GC, and you might easily get it wrong.
> Another question which came up was: you can only declare normal
> functions (not methods) as "external", so you have to write a c
> function for every c++ member function. Do you rebuild the
> inheritance hierachy somehow through the type system (maybe with
> those mysterious phantom types?) or just put an ocaml class system
> on top of it?
My approach in lablgtk was to first use phantom types, ie use
parameters in abstract types to simulate subtyping. Then there is a
second layer using ocaml objects, but I'm not sure you need it in
general. It isonly needed because GTK+ has so many classes that it is
difficult to track which function comes from which class.
In Labltk for instance, there are only phantom types, and without
subtyping (it uses a coercion function "coe" instead). This works well
if you have a hierarchy with few layers (only two in labltk)
Cheers,
Jacques Garrigue
prev parent reply other threads:[~2006-08-14 8:45 UTC|newest]
Thread overview: 5+ messages / expand[flat|nested] mbox.gz Atom feed top
2006-08-13 20:47 micha
2006-08-14 0:20 ` [Caml-list] " Jacques Garrigue
2006-08-14 7:04 ` Jonathan Roewen
2006-08-14 7:17 ` Michael Wohlwend
2006-08-14 8:45 ` Jacques Garrigue [this message]
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