From: Reed Wilson <cedilla@gmail.com>
To: Jeremy Yallop <yallop@gmail.com>
Cc: caml-list@inria.fr
Subject: Re: [Caml-list] Objects and polymorphic variants
Date: Sat, 2 Feb 2013 17:53:41 -0800 [thread overview]
Message-ID: <CALLFq5SDsE=Z6JyozV-HGcqU3of34osicuQEm2-fayW98TCYfQ@mail.gmail.com> (raw)
In-Reply-To: <CAAxsn=HyDTWUidRM7Y-jChN-DtcD+W1+7juQLM7836yVeVZ-Yw@mail.gmail.com>
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Perfect! That's exactly what I need. If I use your idea and provide
explicit typing for the other two methods everything works fine.
My final (working) methods:
method private method_12 : 'a. int -> ([> `One | `Two ] as 'a) = function
| 1 -> `One
| _ -> `Two
method method_123 : int -> [ `One | `Two | `Three ] = function
| 3 -> `Three
| x -> o#method_12 x
method method_124 : int -> [ `One | `Two | `Four ] = function
| 4 -> `Four
| x -> o#method_12 x
OCaml gives me the desired types:
method private method_12 : 'a. int -> ([> `One | `Two ] as 'a)
method method_123 : int -> [ `One | `Three | `Two ]
method method_124 : int -> [ `Four | `One | `Two ]
Thanks for the quick response,
Reed
On Sat, Feb 2, 2013 at 4:13 PM, Jeremy Yallop <yallop@gmail.com> wrote:
> On 2 February 2013 23:18, Reed Wilson <cedilla@gmail.com> wrote:
> > What I really want is a signature like this:
> > method private method_12 : int -> [ > `One | `Two ]
> > method method_123 : int -> [ `One | `Two | `Three ]
> > method method_124 : int -> [ `One | `Two | `Four ]
> >
> > If I replace method_12 with a function outside the class it works fine,
> but
> > for whatever reason method_12 really wants to be the exact same type as
> > method_123 and method_124.
> >
> > Is there any way around this typing requirement for methods?
>
> I think that the problem arises because methods are typed similarly to
> mutually-recursive functions. Unless you give type signatures, both
> functions that are marked as mutually recursive and methods are
> assumed to be monomorhpic. For example, in
>
> let rec f = fun x -> x
> and g = fun x -> f (x + 1)
>
> the types are
>
> val f : int -> int
> val g : int -> int
>
> i.e. f is assigned the type with which it is used in the body of g.
> If you remove the (unnecessary) mutual recursion then the more general
> types will be inferred; for example, in
>
> let f = fun x -> x
> let g = fun x -> f (x + 1)
>
> the types are
>
> val f : 'a -> 'a
> val g : int -> int
>
> It's also possible to ensure that f is assigned the more general type
> by using a type signature:
>
> let rec f : 'a. 'a -> 'a = fun x -> x
> and g = fun x -> f (x + 1)
>
> With objects, the situation is similar, except that you can't mark
> methods non-recursive, so you have to give a type signature to avoid
> the monomorphising. So
>
> object (self)
> method f = fun x -> x
> method g = fun x -> self#f (x + 1)
> end
>
> receives the type
>
> < f : int -> int;
> g : int -> int >
>
> whereas
>
> object (self)
> method f : 'a. 'a -> 'a = fun x -> x
> method g = fun x -> self#f (x + 1)
> end
>
> receives the more general type
>
> < f : 'a. 'a -> 'a;
> g : int -> int >
>
> In your example you can ensure that the type you want is inferred by
> annotating method_12 with a polymorphic signature:
>
> object (self)
> method private method_12 : 'a. int -> ([> `One | `Two] as 'a) =
> function
> | 1 -> `One
> | _ -> `Two
>
> method method_123 = function
> | 3 -> `Three
> | x -> self#method_12 x
>
> method method_124 = function
> | 4 -> `Four
> | x -> self#method_12 x
> end
>
> Now the inferred types for method_123 and method_125 are distinct:
>
> < method_123 : int -> [> `One | `Three | `Two ];
> method_124 : int -> [> `Four | `One | `Two ] >
>
> Hope that helps a bit,
>
> Jeremy.
>
--
ç
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prev parent reply other threads:[~2013-02-03 1:53 UTC|newest]
Thread overview: 3+ messages / expand[flat|nested] mbox.gz Atom feed top
2013-02-02 23:18 Reed Wilson
2013-02-03 0:13 ` Jeremy Yallop
2013-02-03 1:53 ` Reed Wilson [this message]
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