From: Goswin von Brederlow <goswin-v-b@web.de>
To: David MENTRE <dmentre@linux-france.org>
Cc: Goswin von Brederlow <goswin-v-b@web.de>, caml-list@inria.fr
Subject: Re: [Caml-list] Subtyping
Date: Tue, 07 Apr 2009 23:32:11 +0200 [thread overview]
Message-ID: <87bpr8tajo.fsf@frosties.localdomain> (raw)
In-Reply-To: <3d13dcfc0904070041l5d59ec76nc97643fc862f334c@mail.gmail.com> (David MENTRE's message of "Tue, 7 Apr 2009 09:41:32 +0200")
David MENTRE <dmentre@linux-france.org> writes:
> Hello,
>
> On Tue, Apr 7, 2009 at 07:48, Goswin von Brederlow <goswin-v-b@web.de> wrote:
>> In the last 2 weeks I've been playing around with lots of different
>> ways to do the same thing to get a feel for what style suites me
>> best. If you have improvements or alternative ways of doing the two
>> things below let me know.
>
> Well, if you are learning OCaml, I would advise you to read regular
> OCaml code, e.g. the standard library. You'll learn The Right OCaml
> Style(tm).
I've been using ocaml on and off for years now. Just trying out new
things.
>> Lets look another thing going in a similar direction. I want to
>> have a structure where I can store key value pairs. But just for fun
>> lets say I want to store values of different types and the key knows
>> the type of value. In short a heterogeneous associative container:
>
> Well, why don't you just do:
>
> # type k = Int_k of int | Float_k of int;;
> type k = Int_k of int | Float_k of int
> # type v = Int_v of int | Float_v of float;;
> type v = Int_v of int | Float_v of float
> # let h = Hashtbl.create 3;;
> val h : ('_a, '_b) Hashtbl.t = <abstr>
> # Hashtbl.add h (Int_k 3) (Int_v 4);;
> - : unit = ()
> # Hashtbl.add h (Float_k 5) (Float_v 0.6);;
> - : unit = ()
That would allow storing a float value under an int key or vice
versa. Something that would completly corrupt the on-disk format of my
data. One could add runtime checks that prevent this but I would
really like to have this ensured by the type system at compile time.
And I would like to avoid having to write a private insert functions
and public
let insert_int k v = insert (Int_k k) (Int_v v)
let insert_float k v = insert (Float_k k) (Float_v v)
For that the storing data structure would have to know that there are
int and float values and I would rather have the storing structure
polymorphic.
MfG
Goswin
next prev parent reply other threads:[~2009-04-07 21:32 UTC|newest]
Thread overview: 9+ messages / expand[flat|nested] mbox.gz Atom feed top
2009-04-07 5:48 Subtyping Goswin von Brederlow
2009-04-07 7:41 ` [Caml-list] Subtyping David MENTRE
2009-04-07 13:39 ` Peng Zang
2009-04-07 21:33 ` Goswin von Brederlow
2009-04-07 21:32 ` Goswin von Brederlow [this message]
2009-04-08 0:38 ` Goswin von Brederlow
2009-04-08 1:35 ` Jacques Garrigue
2009-04-08 2:43 ` Jacques Garrigue
2009-04-08 5:16 ` Goswin von Brederlow
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