From: Matthew William Cox <matt@mattcox.ca>
To: caml-list@yquem.inria.fr
Subject: Re: [Caml-list] Re: Why OCaml sucks
Date: Thu, 8 May 2008 21:11:33 -0400 [thread overview]
Message-ID: <20080509011133.GA4766@neptune.mattcox.ca> (raw)
In-Reply-To: <200805090139.54870.jon@ffconsultancy.com>
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On Fri, May 09, 2008 at 01:39:54AM +0100, Jon Harrop wrote:
> Brian Hurt recently published...
>
> 3. Lack of multi-file modules: I have never found this to be a
> problem. Nor do I find filenames implying module names to be a
> problem, as many SML advocates seem to believe (yes, both of them ;-).
I would add a 3a: the inability to have a "root"-level functor. As it
stands, all functors are (sometimes naturally, sometimes not) embedded
in a "root" module. I'm looking at you, Map.Make. You too, Set.Make.
> 4. Mutable data: I believe the exact opposite. The ability to drop down to
> mutable data structures for performance without leaving the language is
> essential and the ability to predict memory consumption is essential, both of
> which Haskell lacks. Consequently, Haskell's inability to handle mutation
> efficiently and safely have doomed it to failure for practical applications.
Well, in fairness, there's always the ST monad. However, the rank-2
polymorphism involved is nontrivial, and I agree with you [Jon.]
> 5. Strings: pushing unicode throughout a general purpose language is a
> mistake, IMHO. This is why languages like Java and C# are so slow.
This is simply ridiculous. Using heavy-weight unicode-aware functions
for character operations may slow down string-intensive operations in
those languages, but the only alternative is to be broken. See items 3
and 4 here:
http://www.moserware.com/2008/02/does-your-code-pass-turkey-test.html
In both cases, we need locale-aware character processing. That means
Unicode these days. Unless you code your own routines for processing
every 8-bit character set out there. I don't.
> 6. Shift-reduce conflicts: although there as aspects of OCaml's syntax that I
> would like to tweak (e.g. adding an optional "end" after a "match"
> or "function" to make them easier to nest), I am not bother about the
> shift-reduce conflicts. Mainstream languages get by with far more serious
> syntactic issues (like <<...>> in C++).
I've been bitten by exactly these sorts of problems. Sometimes I get an
obscure type error, sometimes I don't. I've just gotten used to not
placing a match-like construct in the middle of a sequence expression
when I can avoid it.
> 8. Exceptions: I love OCaml's extremely fast exception handling (6x faster
> than C++, 30x faster than Java and 600x faster than C#/F#!). I hate
> the "exceptions are for exceptional circumstances" line promoted by the
> advocates of any language implementation with cripplingly-slow exception
> handlers. I really miss fast exception handling in F#. Brian gives an example
> of exception handling with recursive IO functions failing to be tail
> recursive here and advocates option types. But recursion is the wrong tool
> for the job here and option types are even worse. You should use mutation
> and, failing that, CPS.
I suspect his reaction to exceptions comes from an unfamiliarity with
their uses in Ocaml. In C++/Java land, the gospel is to only use them
for exceptional circumstances. In the case of C++, this is probably
because of the difficulty of writing exception-safe code: if you're
going to throw an exception, your code is likely going to be broken as
a result. As a result, exceptions seem to be reserved for situations
where normal processing must terminate anyways.
> 9. Deforestation: Brian says "Haskell has introduced a very interesting and
> (to my knowledge) unique layer of optimization, called deforrestation". True,
> of course, but useless theoretical piffle because we know that Haskell is
> slow in practice and prohibitively difficult to optimize to-boot. Deforesting
> is really easy to do by hand.
Yes, its easy to do by hand. It's also time consuming. Don't you make a
living off ocaml? I'm surprised you can justify using your time on such a
mechanical task. Granted, deforesting something like map f . map g into
map (f . g) is trivial, but we can come up with both trivial and
nontrivial examples for almost anything.
Cheers,
Matt
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next prev parent reply other threads:[~2008-05-09 1:11 UTC|newest]
Thread overview: 89+ messages / expand[flat|nested] mbox.gz Atom feed top
2008-05-09 0:39 Jon Harrop
2008-05-09 1:11 ` Matthew William Cox [this message]
2008-05-09 5:10 ` [Caml-list] Re: Why OCaml **cks Jon Harrop
2008-05-09 4:45 ` [Caml-list] Re: Why OCaml sucks Arthur Chan
2008-05-09 5:09 ` Jon Harrop
2008-05-09 11:12 ` [Caml-list] Re: Why OCaml rocks Gerd Stolpmann
2008-05-09 11:58 ` Gabriel Kerneis
2008-05-09 12:10 ` Concurrency [was Re: [Caml-list] Re: Why OCaml rocks] Robert Fischer
2008-05-09 12:41 ` [Caml-list] Re: Why OCaml rocks Gerd Stolpmann
2008-05-09 12:49 ` David Teller
2008-05-09 18:10 ` Jon Harrop
2008-05-09 20:40 ` Gerd Stolpmann
2008-05-09 20:55 ` Berke Durak
2008-05-10 10:56 ` Gerd Stolpmann
2008-05-09 21:00 ` Till Varoquaux
2008-05-09 21:13 ` Berke Durak
2008-05-09 22:26 ` Richard Jones
2008-05-09 23:01 ` Berke Durak
2008-05-10 7:52 ` Richard Jones
2008-05-10 8:24 ` Berke Durak
2008-05-10 8:51 ` Richard Jones
2008-05-13 3:47 ` Jon Harrop
2008-05-09 22:25 ` David Teller
2008-05-09 22:57 ` Vincent Hanquez
2008-05-10 19:59 ` Jon Harrop
2008-05-10 21:39 ` Charles Forsyth
2008-05-11 3:58 ` Jon Harrop
2008-05-11 9:41 ` Charles Forsyth
2008-05-12 13:22 ` Richard Jones
2008-05-12 18:07 ` Jon Harrop
2008-05-12 20:05 ` Arthur Chan
2008-05-13 0:42 ` Gerd Stolpmann
2008-05-13 1:19 ` Jon Harrop
2008-05-13 2:03 ` Gerd Stolpmann
2008-05-13 3:13 ` Jon Harrop
2008-05-12 20:33 ` Arthur Chan
2008-05-12 21:22 ` Till Varoquaux
2008-05-09 13:00 ` [Caml-list] Re: Why OCaml sucks Ulf Wiger (TN/EAB)
2008-05-09 17:46 ` Jon Harrop
2008-05-09 18:17 ` Ulf Wiger (TN/EAB)
2008-05-10 1:29 ` Jon Harrop
2008-05-10 14:51 ` [Caml-list] Re: Why OCaml **cks Ulf Wiger (TN/EAB)
2008-05-10 18:19 ` Jon Harrop
2008-05-10 21:58 ` Ulf Wiger (TN/EAB)
2008-05-10 18:39 ` Mike Lin
2008-05-12 13:31 ` [Caml-list] Re: Why OCaml sucks Kuba Ober
2008-05-12 18:18 ` Jon Harrop
2008-05-12 13:13 ` Kuba Ober
2008-05-12 19:32 ` Arthur Chan
2008-05-09 6:31 ` Tom Primožič
2008-05-09 6:46 ` Elliott Oti
2008-05-09 7:53 ` Till Varoquaux
2008-05-09 7:45 ` Richard Jones
2008-05-09 8:10 ` Jon Harrop
2008-05-09 9:31 ` Richard Jones
2008-05-09 7:58 ` [Caml-list] Re: Why OCaml rocks David Teller
2008-05-09 10:29 ` Jon Harrop
2008-05-09 13:08 ` David Teller
2008-05-09 15:38 ` Jeff Polakow
2008-05-09 18:09 ` Jon Harrop
2008-05-09 20:36 ` Berke Durak
2008-05-09 22:34 ` Richard Jones
2008-05-14 13:44 ` Kuba Ober
2008-05-09 8:29 ` constructive criticism about Ocaml Ulf Wiger (TN/EAB)
2008-05-09 9:45 ` [Caml-list] Re: Why OCaml sucks Vincent Hanquez
2008-05-09 10:23 ` [Caml-list] Re: Why OCaml **cks Jon Harrop
2008-05-09 22:01 ` Vincent Hanquez
2008-05-09 22:23 ` David Teller
2008-05-10 8:36 ` Christophe TROESTLER
2008-05-10 9:18 ` Vincent Hanquez
2008-05-09 11:37 ` [Caml-list] Re: Why OCaml sucks Ralph Douglass
2008-05-09 13:02 ` [Caml-list] Re: Why OCaml rocks David Teller
2008-05-09 12:33 ` not all functional languages lack parallelism Ulf Wiger (TN/EAB)
2008-05-09 18:10 ` Jon Harrop
2008-05-09 20:26 ` Ulf Wiger (TN/EAB)
2008-05-12 12:54 ` [Caml-list] Re: Why OCaml sucks Kuba Ober
2008-05-12 14:16 ` Jon Harrop
2008-05-13 13:33 ` Kuba Ober
2008-05-13 13:49 ` Robert Fischer
2008-05-13 14:01 ` Brian Hurt
2008-05-13 14:13 ` Robert Fischer
2008-05-13 15:18 ` Berke Durak
2008-05-14 4:40 ` Kuba Ober
2008-05-13 14:25 ` Gerd Stolpmann
2008-05-14 4:29 ` Kuba Ober
2008-05-12 13:01 ` Kuba Ober
2008-05-12 19:18 ` Arthur Chan
2008-05-12 19:41 ` Karl Zilles
2008-05-13 13:17 ` Kuba Ober
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