* [Caml-list] Wasn't O'Caml a functional language?
@ 2002-09-21 22:47 Alessandro Baretta
[not found] ` <15756.65084.40025.869484@spike.artisan.com>
0 siblings, 1 reply; 6+ messages in thread
From: Alessandro Baretta @ 2002-09-21 22:47 UTC (permalink / raw)
To: Ocaml
First of all, allow me to RTFM myself before anybody else
does. I just spent the last hour or so tracking down a bug
caused by the "procedural-style" side-effect in Queue.iter:
the queue is actually emptied by that function. Now, if
O'Caml is a functional language, and Queue.iter is a
functional iterator, why is there a need for that very
counterintuitive side-effect? If I use List.iter on a list,
I do not expect it to flush my list of all it's contents.
The same with a Hashtbl.iter, and in general with all
functional iterators, which are the very heart of the
standard library.
In my opinion, "The Right Way (TM)" to use datastructures in
O'Caml and in functional languages in general is to build
them, iterate non-destructively over them as many times as
necessary, and finally let the GC reclaim them when they are
no longer accessible from the live scope. What makes this
approach much simpler to handle, much more intuitive to
understand and less intricate to debug, is that data
structure aliasing does not have to be explicitly taken into
account. On the other hand, if one uses iterators with
side-effects and the data structures are aliased--as was my
case in my application, until I figured out what was going
wrong--all sorts of weird non-local bugs can appear, and
tracking them down can take quite a few runs of ocamldebug.
Concluding, let me "break a spear"--as we say in Italian--in
favor of a purely functional standard library, where such
datastructures as Queue.t's and the like can be freely
aliased without a second thought.
Cheers, and back to work...
Alex
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* Re: [Caml-list] Wasn't O'Caml a functional language?
[not found] ` <15756.65084.40025.869484@spike.artisan.com>
@ 2002-09-21 23:47 ` Alessandro Baretta
2002-09-22 4:23 ` [Caml-list] " Michaël Grünewald
0 siblings, 1 reply; 6+ messages in thread
From: Alessandro Baretta @ 2002-09-21 23:47 UTC (permalink / raw)
To: John Gerard Malecki, Ocaml
John Gerard Malecki wrote:
> I don't see any side effects in Queue.iter? Here is the code
Neither do I. I probably just need to retire to buddhist
monastery in Nepal. Here is the quote from the manual:
* iter f q applies f in turn to all elements of q, from the
* least recently entered to the most recently entered. The >
* queue itself is unchanged.
> Can you better describe the problem? (Maybe what you're saying is
> that if f is side-effecting then iter acts perversely.)
I sure can: it's just a vast degenerative neurological
disease. Sorry, my mistake, the side-effect is not in
Queue.iter. It is in Queue.transfer, which I happen to use
somewhere down the road in the control flux of the function
I apply to the Queue. The fact that the main data structure
in my program has type "data_elem Queue.t Queue.t Queue.t"
adds to the confusion. The iterator giving me trouble is the
one acting at the central Queue.t level, and the unwanted
side_effects are situated at the lower level of nesting
(data_elem Queue.t).
Anyway, my main claim, although misdirected, in not entirely
faulty. Queue.transfer can be thought of as analogous to
List.append. When I write let list = list1 @ list2 I do not
expect side-effects on list1 or list2.
My most sincere apologies for my previous encephalitic post.
Alex
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* [Caml-list] Re: Wasn't O'Caml a functional language?
2002-09-21 23:47 ` Alessandro Baretta
@ 2002-09-22 4:23 ` Michaël Grünewald
2002-09-23 10:40 ` Pixel
2002-09-24 8:45 ` Alessandro Baretta
0 siblings, 2 replies; 6+ messages in thread
From: Michaël Grünewald @ 2002-09-22 4:23 UTC (permalink / raw)
To: caml-list
Alessandro Baretta <alex@baretta.com> writes:
[...]
> Anyway, my main claim, although misdirected, in not entirely
> faulty. Queue.transfer can be thought of as analogous to
> List.append. When I write let list = list1 @ list2 I do not expect
> side-effects on list1 or list2.
Then you maybe should use Lists, why, if queues have the same behavior than
lists, give them a different name ?
--
Michaël Grünewald <michael-grunewald@wanadoo.fr> - RSA PGP Key ID: 0x20D90C12
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^ permalink raw reply [flat|nested] 6+ messages in thread
* Re: [Caml-list] Re: Wasn't O'Caml a functional language?
2002-09-22 4:23 ` [Caml-list] " Michaël Grünewald
@ 2002-09-23 10:40 ` Pixel
2002-09-24 8:45 ` Alessandro Baretta
1 sibling, 0 replies; 6+ messages in thread
From: Pixel @ 2002-09-23 10:40 UTC (permalink / raw)
To: Michaël Grünewald; +Cc: caml-list
"Michaël Grünewald" <michael-grunewald@wanadoo.fr> writes:
> Alessandro Baretta <alex@baretta.com> writes:
>
> [...]
>
> > Anyway, my main claim, although misdirected, in not entirely
> > faulty. Queue.transfer can be thought of as analogous to
> > List.append. When I write let list = list1 @ list2 I do not expect
> > side-effects on list1 or list2.
>
> Then you maybe should use Lists, why, if queues have the same behavior than
> lists, give them a different name ?
because using (simply linked) lists as FIFOs is costly?
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* Re: [Caml-list] Re: Wasn't O'Caml a functional language?
2002-09-22 4:23 ` [Caml-list] " Michaël Grünewald
2002-09-23 10:40 ` Pixel
@ 2002-09-24 8:45 ` Alessandro Baretta
[not found] ` <15760.15527.648990.807473@hod.void.org>
1 sibling, 1 reply; 6+ messages in thread
From: Alessandro Baretta @ 2002-09-24 8:45 UTC (permalink / raw)
To: Michaël Grünewald, Ocaml, Pixel
Michaël Grünewald wrote:
> Alessandro Baretta <alex@baretta.com> writes:
>
>>Anyway, my main claim, although misdirected, in not entirely
>>faulty. Queue.transfer can be thought of as analogous to
>>List.append. When I write let list = list1 @ list2 I do not expect
>>side-effects on list1 or list2.
>
>
> Then you maybe should use Lists, why, if queues have the same behavior than
> lists, give them a different name ?
They don't have the same behavior, and are not supposed to
have the same behaviour.
let l = [] in
let l = e1 :: l in
let l = e2 :: l in
let l = e3 :: l in
List.iter f l
is equivalent to
f e3; f e2; fe1
which is not what I need. On the other hand,
let q = Queue.create () in
let _ = Queue.add e1 q in
let _ = Queue.add e2 q in
let _ = Queue.add e3 q in
Queue.iter f q
is equivalent to
f e1; f e2; f e3
which is correct with respect to what I need. This is the
reason for using Queues. I somehow expected this to be the
only difference with respect to Lists, and did not suspect
that some of the functions of the Queue module (other than
the obvious add and take) had side-effects. I realize that
"transfer" is a significantly different name than "append",
and I should have known better than to use it without
expecting side-effects, but, anyway, I was stumbled on this
function. And, believe me, it took me quite a while to
figure out in Ocamldebug/Epeire why in the world my program
was doing what it was. So let me say, "Long live functional
iterators which have no side-effects! Down with explicit
handling of aliasing! " [ ... feel free to add here whatever
political slogans you like best ;) ]
BTW, picking up on Pixel's comment, I don't really know
whether Queues are any more efficient than
lists-used-as-FIFO, although I would expect them to be. I am
mostly interested in the conciseness of the API.
Queue.iter f q
is much more elegant and readable than the equivalent
List.iter f (List.rev l)
Of course, performance is also important, but the software
I'm writing will have its bottleneck in IO anyway, so no
there is no significant advantage to be had by optimising
the algorithms, other than to increase the fraction of CPU
idle time, which is already pretty high. Of course, in other
contexts, performace would matter a lot more.
Cheers,
Alex
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* Re: [Caml-list] Re: Wasn't O'Caml a functional language?
[not found] ` <15760.15527.648990.807473@hod.void.org>
@ 2002-09-24 13:32 ` Alessandro Baretta
0 siblings, 0 replies; 6+ messages in thread
From: Alessandro Baretta @ 2002-09-24 13:32 UTC (permalink / raw)
To: M E Leypold @ labnet, Ocaml
M E Leypold @ labnet wrote:
>
> Hello,
>
> Alessandro Baretta writes:
>
> <...>
>
>> is equivalent to f e1; f e2; f e3
>>
>> which is correct with respect to what I need. This is
>> the reason for using Queues. I somehow expected this to
>> be the only difference with respect to Lists, and did
>> not suspect that some of the functions of the Queue
>> module (other than the obvious add and take) had
>> side-effects. I realize that
>
> I'm not so very much surprised. Let's look at stacks. A
> stack is algebraically equivalent to a list (Queues
> aren't, that's whay I'm talking about stacks for a
> moment). ...
Alright. AFAIK, the stack is the fundamental data structure
holding the state of a program in all procedural languages.
A stack is something very intrinsically procedural in
nature. A queue is not. From a functional point of view,
that is, if you disregard "operations" on queues, and forget
how they are built -- for they are built in a sequential, as
opposed to recursive, manner -- you can just state that a
queue is a sequence of data whose iterators act upon in
direct, as opposed to inverse, order of construction. Of
course, such a behavior can be achieved using lists and a
recursive data-structure-traversal to generate them, but for
some uses a data type with a FIFO nature is just easier to
imagine and work with.
When I looked at the Queue.transfer function, I was not
looking for a means of implementing a transition in an
abstract state machine. I was looking for an implementation
of the abstract operation of concatenation on the free
monoid of the sequences of elementary data tokens of a given
type. Alright, "transfer" is a name that quite transparently
maps to something a little different, but somehow I just
overlooked the side-effect.
> Now, queues are containers, so I'd expect side-effects
> and in-place update of state.
In computer science, a data type is usually defined as a set
of values and a set of operations on it. This definition
coincidentally is the definition of an algebraic structure.
The algebraic structure I need to work with consists of the
set of sequences of elementary data tokens. So, you see, I'm
not really interested in the state model for Queues.
> Of course this is all very
> imperative and not functional, but in a sense all ML
> dialects seem not to be pure in that respect. (OK, don't
> shoot me for the use of 'pure' here: I'm not a computer
> scientist, so I might use the word wrongly).
BANG! ;) Yes, ML is not purely functional, whatever that
means, because you can show that "pure" lambda calculus
(having only the lamda-abstraction operator and function
application) has the full expressive power of a full-fledged
procedural language. You can simulate let-bindings with
lambda-abstraction and function application ( let t = M in N
<=> (\t.N) M). You can simulate operation sequences with let
bindings (let foo1 = M1 N1 in let foo2 = M2 N2 in ...). You
can simulate any loop with a while loop and a while loop
with with recursion (letrec f = if M then N else f).
Finally, you can simulate recursion with lambda-abstraction
and function application
(http://www.enseignement.polytechnique.fr/informatique/M2/lp/a1.html).
> As far as your original problem is concerned: I think a
> purely functional and efficient 'queue' is not so easy to
> be implemented: you can't share the tail in such a nice
> way as lists do. At least: not as easy.
>
> Regards -- Markus
On the contrary, if no destructive operations exist on a
datastructure, aliasing is never a problem. However, the
meaning of "destructive" has to be defined.
Alex
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2002-09-21 22:47 [Caml-list] Wasn't O'Caml a functional language? Alessandro Baretta
[not found] ` <15756.65084.40025.869484@spike.artisan.com>
2002-09-21 23:47 ` Alessandro Baretta
2002-09-22 4:23 ` [Caml-list] " Michaël Grünewald
2002-09-23 10:40 ` Pixel
2002-09-24 8:45 ` Alessandro Baretta
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2002-09-24 13:32 ` Alessandro Baretta
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