Yes, 
I found that explicitly adding the conversion function works works but then I got
into some currying problem -- sorry I'm relatively new to ocaml:

let conversion_test = test_conversions (fun (x : uint8) -> (x:>int)) in
    conversion_test uint8 1

I want to just define the conversion test inside the body of the let so I can reuse the name
for the other types. That doesn't seem to work?
Immanuel

On Fri, Jul 24, 2015 at 4:44 PM, Jacques Garrigue <garrigue@math.nagoya-u.ac.jp> wrote:
On 2015/07/24 23:04, immanuel litzroth wrote:
>
> I have a question related to private type abbreviations
> I'm interfacing C++ and ocaml and I want to make sure that the ranges of integer types are correct and reflect them in the ocaml interface.
>
> So I define
> type uint8 = private int
> and
> type int8 = private int
> same for the other sizes/signedness
> and the appropriate functions to do range checking (those are external and use
> std::numeric limits)
> external uint8 : int -> uint8 = "make_uint8"
> ...
> this gives typesafety and avoids boxing/unboxing and makes sure that the user can
> only pass values that are range checked at the earliest opportunity.
>
> Now I wanna check my code
> for all the types I wanna use 1 checking function something like this:
>
> let test_conversions   (the_fun : int -> 't)  (the_val : int) =
>   try
>     let the_t = the_fun the_val in
>     Printf.printf "Numbers are %d\n" (the_t : 't :> int)
>   with
>   | Invalid_argument str -> Printf.printf "Error: %s" str
>
> let () = test_conversions uint8 1 -> will work
> ..
> let () = test_conversions uint64  (-1) -> will print Error...
>
> Now this doesn't typecheck because the type  var 't in the signature is too general.
> what I need to put there is "a type coercible to int"
> Is that possible? Is there some way to achieve this?

I see no way to do that implicitly.
Namely, subtyping is only checked for coercions, so if you don’t write a coercion for
each of your types, this won’t work.
This means you need to add another parameter:

let test_conversions  (coerce : ’t -> int)  (the_fun : int -> 't)  (the_val : int) =
  try
    let the_t = the_fun the_val in
    Printf.printf "Numbers are %d\n” (coerce the_t)
  with
  | Invalid_argument str -> Printf.printf "Error: %s” str

let from_uint8 x : uint8 :> int = x
let from_uint64 x : uint64 :> int = x

let () = test_conversions from_uint8 uint8 1
..
let () = test_conversions from_uint64 uint64  (-1)

Jacques Garrigue