From: Jon Harrop <jon@ffconsultancy.com>
To: Brian Hurt <bhurt@spnz.org>, caml-list@yquem.inria.fr
Subject: Re: [Caml-list] stl?
Date: Wed, 4 Mar 2009 01:59:48 +0000 [thread overview]
Message-ID: <200903040159.48574.jon@ffconsultancy.com> (raw)
In-Reply-To: <alpine.DEB.2.00.0903031851530.7859@beast>
On Wednesday 04 March 2009 00:11:32 you wrote:
> On Tue, 3 Mar 2009, Jon Harrop wrote:
> > Functors give you the same capability in OCaml but they are rarely used
> > precisely because the functionality is not very useful.
Also largely because there is not enough good tutorial information available
explaining how to leverage functors.
> I think I disagree with this. I think functors aren't used very much in
> Ocaml because:
> 1) They're a big, scary name, and
> 2) They're slightly less efficient.
>
> The biggest difference between Haskell and Ocaml that I see is simply the
> difference between attitudes of the two communities. The Ocaml community
> is like "Don't use functors- they disable inlining and cost you six whole
> clock cycles on a function call! They're evil, I tell you!"
Efficiency is only important in the context of functors when abstracting very
fast and common functions like arithmetic without defunctorizing your code. I
don't think that is why people avoid functors in OCaml.
> Meanwhile,
> the Haskell community is like "I used typeclasses all over my application,
> and the performance didn't completely suck- woot! Type classes rule!"
> This is a broad generalization, and not completely accurate- but on the
> whole, the ocaml community is much more focused on (clock cycle)
> efficiency, while the Haskell community is much more focused on
> abstraction and programmer-cycle efficiency.
I think that is a reflection of what the communities desire rather than what
they already have. OCaml is already fast (particularly on amd64) but OCamlers
always want even better performance. Haskell's development experience is a
real sore point and they want to address that. However, I would also say that
both communities are moving very slowly toward these goals.
> The type classes comparison isn't even an analogy- it's a precise
> relationship. Anywhere you might be thinking, in Ocaml, "this would be a
> nice place to use a type class", use a functor. You want operator
> overloading in Ocaml? You got it: use a functor.
Functors do not facilitate operator overloading. You still end up with a
combinatorial explosion in the number of operator names.
> If this causes you a
> knee jerk reaction about performance, ask yourself this: do you know how
> type classes are implemented in Haskell, and what their performance hit
> there is? Now, imagine programming haskell where typeclasses are only
> used in a very places- Ord, Eq, Monad. No Num. No Monoid. No Show.
> That's Ocaml. Not that it has to be.
I don't follow your breakdown. OCaml does not have Ord and Eq, it only has a
hack for structural equality. Same for Show. Few people care about Monad, Num
and Monoid.
However, that is trivial to fix with run-time type information that can convey
per-type functions. Both F# and my HLVM already do that.
> Having actually used Haskell for a while, I think I actually like functors
> better than type classes. But that's a rant for a different venue. The
> big difference is that Haskell programmers use type classes, and the Ocaml
> programmers don't use Functors (very often, if at all).
There are some very good examples of functors out there, like ocamlgraph.
--
Dr Jon Harrop, Flying Frog Consultancy Ltd.
http://www.ffconsultancy.com/?e
next prev parent reply other threads:[~2009-03-04 1:54 UTC|newest]
Thread overview: 72+ messages / expand[flat|nested] mbox.gz Atom feed top
2009-03-03 21:40 stl? Raoul Duke
2009-03-03 22:31 ` [Caml-list] stl? Yoann Padioleau
2009-03-03 22:42 ` Till Varoquaux
2009-03-03 23:36 ` Jon Harrop
2009-03-04 0:13 ` Peng Zang
2009-03-04 0:58 ` Yoann Padioleau
2009-03-04 1:10 ` Raoul Duke
2009-03-04 1:19 ` Pal-Kristian Engstad
2009-03-04 1:21 ` Yoann Padioleau
2009-03-04 1:29 ` Jon Harrop
2009-03-04 14:26 ` Kuba Ober
2009-03-04 14:24 ` Kuba Ober
2009-03-03 23:42 ` Jon Harrop
2009-03-04 0:11 ` Brian Hurt
2009-03-04 1:05 ` Yoann Padioleau
2009-03-04 4:56 ` Brian Hurt
2009-03-04 20:11 ` Yoann Padioleau
2009-03-04 21:59 ` Brian Hurt
2009-03-04 22:42 ` Yoann Padioleau
2009-03-04 23:19 ` Jon Harrop
2009-03-04 23:03 ` Jon Harrop
2009-03-11 3:16 ` Brian Hurt
2009-03-11 5:57 ` David Rajchenbach-Teller
2009-03-11 6:11 ` David Rajchenbach-Teller
2009-03-04 1:59 ` Jon Harrop [this message]
2009-03-04 6:11 ` Brian Hurt
2009-03-04 14:08 ` Christophe TROESTLER
2009-03-04 14:19 ` Peng Zang
2009-03-04 16:14 ` Brian Hurt
2009-03-04 16:35 ` Andreas Rossberg
2009-03-04 16:40 ` Peng Zang
2009-03-04 21:43 ` Nicolas Pouillard
2009-03-05 11:24 ` Wolfgang Lux
2009-03-04 19:45 ` Jon Harrop
2009-03-04 21:23 ` Brian Hurt
2009-03-04 23:17 ` Jon Harrop
2009-03-05 2:26 ` stl? Stefan Monnier
2009-03-04 3:10 ` [Caml-list] stl? Martin Jambon
2009-03-04 6:18 ` Brian Hurt
2009-03-04 16:35 ` Mikkel Fahnøe Jørgensen
2009-03-04 16:48 ` Yoann Padioleau
2009-03-04 20:07 ` Jon Harrop
2009-03-04 20:31 ` Richard Jones
2009-03-04 20:49 ` Yoann Padioleau
2009-03-04 21:20 ` Andreas Rossberg
2009-03-04 21:51 ` Pal-Kristian Engstad
2009-03-04 22:50 ` Jon Harrop
2009-03-04 23:18 ` Pal-Kristian Engstad
2009-03-05 1:31 ` Jon Harrop
2009-03-05 2:15 ` Pal-Kristian Engstad
2009-03-05 3:26 ` Jon Harrop
2009-03-05 6:22 ` yoann padioleau
2009-03-05 7:02 ` Raoul Duke
2009-03-05 8:07 ` Erick Tryzelaar
2009-03-05 9:06 ` Richard Jones
2009-03-05 9:34 ` malc
2009-03-05 9:56 ` Richard Jones
2009-03-05 10:49 ` malc
2009-03-05 11:16 ` Richard Jones
2009-03-05 12:39 ` malc
2009-03-05 19:39 ` Jon Harrop
2009-03-05 21:10 ` Pal-Kristian Engstad
2009-03-05 22:41 ` Richard Jones
2009-03-05 22:53 ` malc
2009-03-05 8:59 ` Richard Jones
2009-03-05 17:50 ` Raoul Duke
2009-03-05 8:17 ` Kuba Ober
2009-03-05 1:06 ` Jon Harrop
2009-03-05 9:09 ` Richard Jones
2009-03-05 20:44 ` Jon Harrop
2009-03-05 20:50 ` Jake Donham
2009-03-05 21:28 ` [Caml-list] OCaml's intermediate representations Jon Harrop
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