From: Alessandro Baretta <alex@baretta.com>
To: Luc Maranget <luc.maranget@inria.fr>, Ocaml <caml-list@inria.fr>
Subject: Re: [Caml-list] Again on pattern matching and strings
Date: Thu, 24 Oct 2002 17:13:53 +0200 [thread overview]
Message-ID: <3DB80E31.40801@baretta.com> (raw)
In-Reply-To: <200210241324.PAA0000015374@beaune.inria.fr>
Luc Maranget wrote:
>>Very strange. I thought the Ocaml compiler sould
>>precalculate the branch of pattern matching to be taken, and
>>then jump, thereby avoiding sequential checking. I'm sorry
>>for my mistake.
>
>
> If you are interested in pm code, I would suggest that you have a look
> at the produced code after pattern-matching compilation (option -dlambda),
> before looking at the compiler sources.
>
> The issue is not really PM bu rather switches: how to compile
> a serche in a ordered list of constants ?
I would expect the PM compiler to do something like
precompute an appropriate hash of all constant patterns at
compile time, and use the runtime hash of the matched value
to jump directly to the pattern (or patterns) having the
same hash. This might produce some code bloat, for you'd
need to have an entry for every hash value, whether or not
there is corresponding pattern. Further, the number of bits
of hash would need to be computed at compile time as the
ceil (log_2 <number of constant patterns>). I'm not saying
that this is the way to go, but I'm pretty sure there is are
better ways than just a sequential comparison.
> To sum it up for strings : strings are atoms to the PM compiler which
> never look into them, it only compares one string against another, for
> equality only. The match compiler does not make avantage of the known
> pattern string in any sense. The match compiler does not make
> avantage of the existence of a lexical ordering on strings. In fact
> many << optimizations >> are posible here, none is performed.
I don't think the compiler should treat strings in a special
way. But it should look into the value, even if it were to
consider it only as a meaningless blob.
> If you want efficient search in a set of strings, PM is not the
> solution, a library solution is provided by Hastbl or Map.
> More efficient solutions can be obtained by coding, or provided by
> third party libraries.
Well, the original problem dealt mostly with having a clean
way to write constant patterns, whether they be strings or
other.
> As to your original problem, I cannot resist proposing a quick and
> dirty solution, using cpp, still having meaningful line numbers.
>
> yourfile.ml:
> #define S1 "...."
> #define S2 "xxxx"
But this is basically what I'm saying. The only difference
is that I advocate having a sort of standard set of
preprocessor features--syntax extensions in camlp4
jargon--that one can simply count on when coding. Constant
definition is among those basic preprocessor features one
would expect to have in a general purpose language. I'd say
the solution DdR proposed is worthy of consideration, but it
would hardly serve its purpose if there is no consensus on
its general use in Ocaml programs. I'm thinking in terms of
source code distributions depending on a standard
development environment: for such an extension to be truly
useful, any developer should be able to count on having it
available on the machine of the user.
Of course, every one of us could develop his or her own set
of syntax extensions, but this would not favor either
generality or quality of the solutions, and it would lower
the degree of readability of the code, since any developer
might end up reading code depending on scarcely documented
syntax extensions.
Can we have a basic set of syntax extensions which might be
considered of general interest (constants and conditionals,
I'd say) accessible with a single backward compatible
switch/wrapper, and call it a standard?
Alex
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next prev parent reply other threads:[~2002-10-24 15:03 UTC|newest]
Thread overview: 22+ messages / expand[flat|nested] mbox.gz Atom feed top
2002-10-23 23:47 Alessandro Baretta
2002-10-23 23:46 ` Alexander V.Voinov
2002-10-23 23:57 ` Stefano Zacchiroli
2002-10-24 7:10 ` Alessandro Baretta
2002-10-24 7:38 ` Stefano Zacchiroli
2002-10-24 8:01 ` Jacques Garrigue
2002-10-24 12:38 ` Alessandro Baretta
2002-10-24 13:24 ` Luc Maranget
2002-10-24 15:13 ` Alessandro Baretta [this message]
2002-10-24 16:26 ` Sven Luther
2002-10-25 8:40 ` Luc Maranget
2002-10-24 4:11 ` Christopher Quinn
[not found] ` <15799.14325.887770.501722@karryall.dnsalias.org>
2002-10-24 7:43 ` Alessandro Baretta
2002-10-24 8:51 ` Daniel de Rauglaudre
2002-10-24 9:50 ` Stefano Zacchiroli
2002-10-24 10:30 ` Noel Welsh
2002-10-24 12:59 ` Daniel de Rauglaudre
2002-10-24 13:16 ` Basile STARYNKEVITCH
2002-10-25 10:29 ` Daniel de Rauglaudre
2002-10-24 12:34 ` Alessandro Baretta
2002-10-24 12:51 ` Daniel de Rauglaudre
[not found] <IIEMJEMIMDMLIIPHPOBLOELNCAAA.fsmith@mathworks.com>
2002-10-24 7:16 ` Alessandro Baretta
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