From: Philippe Wang <mail@philippewang.info>
To: Damien Doligez <damien.doligez@inria.fr>
Cc: OCaML Mailing List <caml-list@inria.fr>
Subject: Re: [Caml-list] Weird GC behaviour
Date: Thu, 29 Sep 2011 01:32:13 +0200 [thread overview]
Message-ID: <CAAFfW_rWiDLXJjNkXLo=8T_kPtBtvERUWL61CmDBMEB6T=ffzA@mail.gmail.com> (raw)
In-Reply-To: <91C06ED2-1A8C-4F05-AEA7-ECB93A229113@inria.fr>
On Wed, Sep 28, 2011 at 5:30 PM, Damien Doligez <damien.doligez@inria.fr> wrote:
> You should say (Ftag (String.copy "Hello")) if you want a fresh mutable
> string. I wouldn't recommend appending "" or using Obj.dup (yuck!)
>
> I agree it was a mistake to make strings mutable, but we have to live
> with it for the time being. If you want to be perfectly safe, you can
> wrap all string literals with String.copy in your program.
If the world tended to be ideal at some point, I'd say it should be a
compiler option, like
# ocamlopt -unshared-litteral-strings
(or -shared-literral-strings)
Sometimes it's painful that strings are mutable, but otherwise, it
would be painful too (maybe less often, I don't know). I believe that
the worst is to have *both* mutable strings *and* the necessity to
copy them every time mutability makes it weird.
When I teach programming using OCaml, I really dislike having to
explain that we have to live with this awful semantics (fortunately
the language has stunning great qualities).
Well, I guess this discussion has occurred thousands of times already.
Sorry for that.
Cheers,
--
Philippe Wang
mail@philippewang.info
prev parent reply other threads:[~2011-09-28 23:32 UTC|newest]
Thread overview: 7+ messages / expand[flat|nested] mbox.gz Atom feed top
2011-09-27 17:30 Thomas Fischbacher
2011-09-28 11:19 ` Damien Doligez
2011-09-28 11:53 ` Thomas Fischbacher
2011-09-28 12:12 ` Gabriel Scherer
2011-09-28 13:07 ` John Carr
2011-09-28 15:30 ` Damien Doligez
2011-09-28 23:32 ` Philippe Wang [this message]
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