* [Caml-list] Types look compatible, but they aren't?
@ 2013-04-13 6:50 Anthony Tavener
2013-04-13 6:56 ` Kakadu
0 siblings, 1 reply; 7+ messages in thread
From: Anthony Tavener @ 2013-04-13 6:50 UTC (permalink / raw)
To: caml-list
[-- Attachment #1: Type: text/plain, Size: 875 bytes --]
File "virtue.ml", line 462, characters 12-24:
Error: This expression has type
int * ((int * int -> int * int) list -> exn) *
(exn -> (int * int -> int * int) list)
but an expression was expected of type
int * ((< .. > as 'a) list -> exn) * (exn -> 'a list)
The code in question:
(fun id ->
let m = Modifier.attach id in
[ m Cast.total'k (fun (v,b) -> (v, max 1 (b-3))) (* <-- line 462
*)
; m Lab.total'k (fun (v,b) -> (v, max 1 (b-3))) ])
For reference, the signature of Modifier.attach:
Db.key -> int * ('a list -> exn) * (exn -> 'a list) -> 'a ->
Modifier.deleter
OCaml version is 4.00.0 -- I know I should upgrade. Keep meaning to, I
guess I will if I wake up and there's no helpful soul explaining what could
be wrong here. :)
Thank-you for any help. My eyes are starting to bug-out looking at this.
-Tony
[-- Attachment #2: Type: text/html, Size: 1391 bytes --]
^ permalink raw reply [flat|nested] 7+ messages in thread
* Re: [Caml-list] Types look compatible, but they aren't?
2013-04-13 6:50 [Caml-list] Types look compatible, but they aren't? Anthony Tavener
@ 2013-04-13 6:56 ` Kakadu
2013-04-13 7:33 ` Gabriel Scherer
0 siblings, 1 reply; 7+ messages in thread
From: Kakadu @ 2013-04-13 6:56 UTC (permalink / raw)
To: Anthony Tavener; +Cc: caml-list
[-- Attachment #1: Type: text/plain, Size: 1108 bytes --]
Maybe function type (int * int -> int * int) is incompatible with object
type <..>?
Kakadu
On Sat, Apr 13, 2013 at 10:50 AM, Anthony Tavener <anthony.tavener@gmail.com
> wrote:
> File "virtue.ml", line 462, characters 12-24:
> Error: This expression has type
> int * ((int * int -> int * int) list -> exn) *
> (exn -> (int * int -> int * int) list)
> but an expression was expected of type
> int * ((< .. > as 'a) list -> exn) * (exn -> 'a list)
>
> The code in question:
>
> (fun id ->
> let m = Modifier.attach id in
> [ m Cast.total'k (fun (v,b) -> (v, max 1 (b-3))) (* <-- line
> 462 *)
> ; m Lab.total'k (fun (v,b) -> (v, max 1 (b-3))) ])
>
> For reference, the signature of Modifier.attach:
> Db.key -> int * ('a list -> exn) * (exn -> 'a list) -> 'a ->
> Modifier.deleter
>
> OCaml version is 4.00.0 -- I know I should upgrade. Keep meaning to, I
> guess I will if I wake up and there's no helpful soul explaining what could
> be wrong here. :)
>
> Thank-you for any help. My eyes are starting to bug-out looking at this.
>
> -Tony
>
>
>
[-- Attachment #2: Type: text/html, Size: 1896 bytes --]
^ permalink raw reply [flat|nested] 7+ messages in thread
* Re: [Caml-list] Types look compatible, but they aren't?
2013-04-13 6:56 ` Kakadu
@ 2013-04-13 7:33 ` Gabriel Scherer
2013-04-13 16:07 ` Anthony Tavener
0 siblings, 1 reply; 7+ messages in thread
From: Gabriel Scherer @ 2013-04-13 7:33 UTC (permalink / raw)
To: Kakadu; +Cc: Anthony Tavener, caml-list
This looks like a value restriction issue with
let m = Modifier.attach id
"A function obtained through partial application is not polymorphic enough"
http://caml.inria.fr/resources/doc/faq/core.en.html#eta-expansion
If this is indeed the source of your error, you can regain
type-checking by using instead
let m total = Modifier.attach id total
Note that this may change the semantics of your code if
(Modifier.attach id) does a side-effect before getting its next
parameter: if would have been effected only once with your previous
definition, and will be effected at each call of 'm' with the new
definition.
On Sat, Apr 13, 2013 at 8:56 AM, Kakadu <kakadu.hafanana@gmail.com> wrote:
> Maybe function type (int * int -> int * int) is incompatible with object
> type <..>?
>
> Kakadu
>
>
> On Sat, Apr 13, 2013 at 10:50 AM, Anthony Tavener
> <anthony.tavener@gmail.com> wrote:
>>
>> File "virtue.ml", line 462, characters 12-24:
>> Error: This expression has type
>> int * ((int * int -> int * int) list -> exn) *
>> (exn -> (int * int -> int * int) list)
>> but an expression was expected of type
>> int * ((< .. > as 'a) list -> exn) * (exn -> 'a list)
>>
>> The code in question:
>>
>> (fun id ->
>> let m = Modifier.attach id in
>> [ m Cast.total'k (fun (v,b) -> (v, max 1 (b-3))) (* <-- line 462
>> *)
>> ; m Lab.total'k (fun (v,b) -> (v, max 1 (b-3))) ])
>>
>> For reference, the signature of Modifier.attach:
>> Db.key -> int * ('a list -> exn) * (exn -> 'a list) -> 'a ->
>> Modifier.deleter
>>
>> OCaml version is 4.00.0 -- I know I should upgrade. Keep meaning to, I
>> guess I will if I wake up and there's no helpful soul explaining what
>> could
>> be wrong here. :)
>>
>> Thank-you for any help. My eyes are starting to bug-out looking at this.
>>
>> -Tony
>>
>>
>
^ permalink raw reply [flat|nested] 7+ messages in thread
* Re: [Caml-list] Types look compatible, but they aren't?
2013-04-13 7:33 ` Gabriel Scherer
@ 2013-04-13 16:07 ` Anthony Tavener
2013-04-13 16:15 ` Anthony Tavener
0 siblings, 1 reply; 7+ messages in thread
From: Anthony Tavener @ 2013-04-13 16:07 UTC (permalink / raw)
To: Gabriel Scherer; +Cc: Kakadu, caml-list
[-- Attachment #1: Type: text/plain, Size: 3459 bytes --]
Ohhh... that is interesting. (TL;DR: problem solved, and it was from
inappropriate Oo.id use.)
Modifier.attach is actually implemented as a function of one argument which
does some stuff,
returning a function of two arguments, to avoid redundant lookups in the
case of multiple "attach"
to the same "id".
When I remove the let m = ... and just inline "Modifer.attach id ..." the
type of Modifier.attach changes to:
Db.key -> int * (((< _.. > as 'a) list -> exn) * (exn -> 'a list) -> 'a
-> Modifier.deleter
So, 'a becomes: (< _.. > as 'a) -- I get some monomorphic... object?
As I wrote this I had an idea and found the problem:
...
(* return (tbl -> unit) function which deletes this specific function *)
let del_id = Oo.id fn in
(fun tbl ->
let lst = List.filter (fun e -> Oo.id e <> del_id) (fn_list tbl) in
Hashtbl.replace tbl tag (inj lst))
Here, "fn" is the provided function, and I want an easy way to remove such
functions uniquely from the
mess of Hashtbl, universal embedding, and list. I tried a trick I once read
Alain suggest for getting a
unique id using the object module... and I guess that brought in this <..>
thing I was unfamiliar with. :)
Instead of Oo.id I'm using Hashtbl.hash now, which is normally what I'd
do... not sure why I
half-remembered some trick with Oo.id.
Thank-you for looking at this, both of you. It helped me dig in the right
direction!
On Sat, Apr 13, 2013 at 1:33 AM, Gabriel Scherer
<gabriel.scherer@gmail.com>wrote:
> This looks like a value restriction issue with
>
> let m = Modifier.attach id
>
> "A function obtained through partial application is not polymorphic
> enough"
> http://caml.inria.fr/resources/doc/faq/core.en.html#eta-expansion
>
> If this is indeed the source of your error, you can regain
> type-checking by using instead
>
> let m total = Modifier.attach id total
>
> Note that this may change the semantics of your code if
> (Modifier.attach id) does a side-effect before getting its next
> parameter: if would have been effected only once with your previous
> definition, and will be effected at each call of 'm' with the new
> definition.
>
> On Sat, Apr 13, 2013 at 8:56 AM, Kakadu <kakadu.hafanana@gmail.com> wrote:
> > Maybe function type (int * int -> int * int) is incompatible with object
> > type <..>?
> >
> > Kakadu
> >
> >
> > On Sat, Apr 13, 2013 at 10:50 AM, Anthony Tavener
> > <anthony.tavener@gmail.com> wrote:
> >>
> >> File "virtue.ml", line 462, characters 12-24:
> >> Error: This expression has type
> >> int * ((int * int -> int * int) list -> exn) *
> >> (exn -> (int * int -> int * int) list)
> >> but an expression was expected of type
> >> int * ((< .. > as 'a) list -> exn) * (exn -> 'a list)
> >>
> >> The code in question:
> >>
> >> (fun id ->
> >> let m = Modifier.attach id in
> >> [ m Cast.total'k (fun (v,b) -> (v, max 1 (b-3))) (* <-- line
> 462
> >> *)
> >> ; m Lab.total'k (fun (v,b) -> (v, max 1 (b-3))) ])
> >>
> >> For reference, the signature of Modifier.attach:
> >> Db.key -> int * ('a list -> exn) * (exn -> 'a list) -> 'a ->
> >> Modifier.deleter
> >>
> >> OCaml version is 4.00.0 -- I know I should upgrade. Keep meaning to, I
> >> guess I will if I wake up and there's no helpful soul explaining what
> >> could
> >> be wrong here. :)
> >>
> >> Thank-you for any help. My eyes are starting to bug-out looking at this.
> >>
> >> -Tony
> >>
> >>
> >
>
[-- Attachment #2: Type: text/html, Size: 5182 bytes --]
^ permalink raw reply [flat|nested] 7+ messages in thread
* Re: [Caml-list] Types look compatible, but they aren't?
2013-04-13 16:07 ` Anthony Tavener
@ 2013-04-13 16:15 ` Anthony Tavener
2013-04-13 17:14 ` Gabriel Scherer
0 siblings, 1 reply; 7+ messages in thread
From: Anthony Tavener @ 2013-04-13 16:15 UTC (permalink / raw)
To: Gabriel Scherer; +Cc: Kakadu, caml-list
[-- Attachment #1: Type: text/plain, Size: 4087 bytes --]
I forgot to note, that the interesting thing was how the type inferred for
Modifier.attach when it had
one argument applied did not show the < _.. > monomorphic object
constraint. Modifier.attach
is actually a: fun id -> (key -> fn -> deleter), rather than a
straightforward three-argument function. Once
the (key -> fn -> deleter) function would come into play, the "object" was
revealed.
On Sat, Apr 13, 2013 at 10:07 AM, Anthony Tavener <anthony.tavener@gmail.com
> wrote:
> Ohhh... that is interesting. (TL;DR: problem solved, and it was from
> inappropriate Oo.id use.)
>
> Modifier.attach is actually implemented as a function of one argument
> which does some stuff,
> returning a function of two arguments, to avoid redundant lookups in the
> case of multiple "attach"
> to the same "id".
>
> When I remove the let m = ... and just inline "Modifer.attach id ..." the
> type of Modifier.attach changes to:
>
> Db.key -> int * (((< _.. > as 'a) list -> exn) * (exn -> 'a list) -> 'a
> -> Modifier.deleter
>
> So, 'a becomes: (< _.. > as 'a) -- I get some monomorphic... object?
>
> As I wrote this I had an idea and found the problem:
>
> ...
> (* return (tbl -> unit) function which deletes this specific function *)
> let del_id = Oo.id fn in
> (fun tbl ->
> let lst = List.filter (fun e -> Oo.id e <> del_id) (fn_list tbl) in
> Hashtbl.replace tbl tag (inj lst))
>
>
> Here, "fn" is the provided function, and I want an easy way to remove such
> functions uniquely from the
> mess of Hashtbl, universal embedding, and list. I tried a trick I once
> read Alain suggest for getting a
> unique id using the object module... and I guess that brought in this <..>
> thing I was unfamiliar with. :)
> Instead of Oo.id I'm using Hashtbl.hash now, which is normally what I'd
> do... not sure why I
> half-remembered some trick with Oo.id.
>
> Thank-you for looking at this, both of you. It helped me dig in the right
> direction!
>
>
> On Sat, Apr 13, 2013 at 1:33 AM, Gabriel Scherer <
> gabriel.scherer@gmail.com> wrote:
>
>> This looks like a value restriction issue with
>>
>> let m = Modifier.attach id
>>
>> "A function obtained through partial application is not polymorphic
>> enough"
>> http://caml.inria.fr/resources/doc/faq/core.en.html#eta-expansion
>>
>> If this is indeed the source of your error, you can regain
>> type-checking by using instead
>>
>> let m total = Modifier.attach id total
>>
>> Note that this may change the semantics of your code if
>> (Modifier.attach id) does a side-effect before getting its next
>> parameter: if would have been effected only once with your previous
>> definition, and will be effected at each call of 'm' with the new
>> definition.
>>
>> On Sat, Apr 13, 2013 at 8:56 AM, Kakadu <kakadu.hafanana@gmail.com>
>> wrote:
>> > Maybe function type (int * int -> int * int) is incompatible with object
>> > type <..>?
>> >
>> > Kakadu
>> >
>> >
>> > On Sat, Apr 13, 2013 at 10:50 AM, Anthony Tavener
>> > <anthony.tavener@gmail.com> wrote:
>> >>
>> >> File "virtue.ml", line 462, characters 12-24:
>> >> Error: This expression has type
>> >> int * ((int * int -> int * int) list -> exn) *
>> >> (exn -> (int * int -> int * int) list)
>> >> but an expression was expected of type
>> >> int * ((< .. > as 'a) list -> exn) * (exn -> 'a list)
>> >>
>> >> The code in question:
>> >>
>> >> (fun id ->
>> >> let m = Modifier.attach id in
>> >> [ m Cast.total'k (fun (v,b) -> (v, max 1 (b-3))) (* <-- line
>> 462
>> >> *)
>> >> ; m Lab.total'k (fun (v,b) -> (v, max 1 (b-3))) ])
>> >>
>> >> For reference, the signature of Modifier.attach:
>> >> Db.key -> int * ('a list -> exn) * (exn -> 'a list) -> 'a ->
>> >> Modifier.deleter
>> >>
>> >> OCaml version is 4.00.0 -- I know I should upgrade. Keep meaning to, I
>> >> guess I will if I wake up and there's no helpful soul explaining what
>> >> could
>> >> be wrong here. :)
>> >>
>> >> Thank-you for any help. My eyes are starting to bug-out looking at
>> this.
>> >>
>> >> -Tony
>> >>
>> >>
>> >
>>
>
>
[-- Attachment #2: Type: text/html, Size: 5975 bytes --]
^ permalink raw reply [flat|nested] 7+ messages in thread
* Re: [Caml-list] Types look compatible, but they aren't?
2013-04-13 16:15 ` Anthony Tavener
@ 2013-04-13 17:14 ` Gabriel Scherer
2013-04-13 17:25 ` Anthony Tavener
0 siblings, 1 reply; 7+ messages in thread
From: Gabriel Scherer @ 2013-04-13 17:14 UTC (permalink / raw)
To: Anthony Tavener; +Cc: Kakadu, caml-list
> So, 'a becomes: (< _.. > as 'a) -- I get some monomorphic... object?
Just a small thing, (< .. > as 'a) is not monomorphic, it is still a
polymorphic type, that may be instantiated with any object type. It is
"less polymorphic" than 'a (can be instantiated with anything).
On Sat, Apr 13, 2013 at 6:15 PM, Anthony Tavener
<anthony.tavener@gmail.com> wrote:
> I forgot to note, that the interesting thing was how the type inferred for
> Modifier.attach when it had
> one argument applied did not show the < _.. > monomorphic object constraint.
> Modifier.attach
> is actually a: fun id -> (key -> fn -> deleter), rather than a
> straightforward three-argument function. Once
> the (key -> fn -> deleter) function would come into play, the "object" was
> revealed.
>
>
> On Sat, Apr 13, 2013 at 10:07 AM, Anthony Tavener
> <anthony.tavener@gmail.com> wrote:
>>
>> Ohhh... that is interesting. (TL;DR: problem solved, and it was from
>> inappropriate Oo.id use.)
>>
>> Modifier.attach is actually implemented as a function of one argument
>> which does some stuff,
>> returning a function of two arguments, to avoid redundant lookups in the
>> case of multiple "attach"
>> to the same "id".
>>
>> When I remove the let m = ... and just inline "Modifer.attach id ..." the
>> type of Modifier.attach changes to:
>>
>> Db.key -> int * (((< _.. > as 'a) list -> exn) * (exn -> 'a list) -> 'a
>> -> Modifier.deleter
>>
>> So, 'a becomes: (< _.. > as 'a) -- I get some monomorphic... object?
>>
>> As I wrote this I had an idea and found the problem:
>>
>> ...
>> (* return (tbl -> unit) function which deletes this specific function *)
>> let del_id = Oo.id fn in
>> (fun tbl ->
>> let lst = List.filter (fun e -> Oo.id e <> del_id) (fn_list tbl) in
>> Hashtbl.replace tbl tag (inj lst))
>>
>>
>> Here, "fn" is the provided function, and I want an easy way to remove such
>> functions uniquely from the
>> mess of Hashtbl, universal embedding, and list. I tried a trick I once
>> read Alain suggest for getting a
>> unique id using the object module... and I guess that brought in this <..>
>> thing I was unfamiliar with. :)
>> Instead of Oo.id I'm using Hashtbl.hash now, which is normally what I'd
>> do... not sure why I
>> half-remembered some trick with Oo.id.
>>
>> Thank-you for looking at this, both of you. It helped me dig in the right
>> direction!
>>
>>
>> On Sat, Apr 13, 2013 at 1:33 AM, Gabriel Scherer
>> <gabriel.scherer@gmail.com> wrote:
>>>
>>> This looks like a value restriction issue with
>>>
>>> let m = Modifier.attach id
>>>
>>> "A function obtained through partial application is not polymorphic
>>> enough"
>>> http://caml.inria.fr/resources/doc/faq/core.en.html#eta-expansion
>>>
>>> If this is indeed the source of your error, you can regain
>>> type-checking by using instead
>>>
>>> let m total = Modifier.attach id total
>>>
>>> Note that this may change the semantics of your code if
>>> (Modifier.attach id) does a side-effect before getting its next
>>> parameter: if would have been effected only once with your previous
>>> definition, and will be effected at each call of 'm' with the new
>>> definition.
>>>
>>> On Sat, Apr 13, 2013 at 8:56 AM, Kakadu <kakadu.hafanana@gmail.com>
>>> wrote:
>>> > Maybe function type (int * int -> int * int) is incompatible with
>>> > object
>>> > type <..>?
>>> >
>>> > Kakadu
>>> >
>>> >
>>> > On Sat, Apr 13, 2013 at 10:50 AM, Anthony Tavener
>>> > <anthony.tavener@gmail.com> wrote:
>>> >>
>>> >> File "virtue.ml", line 462, characters 12-24:
>>> >> Error: This expression has type
>>> >> int * ((int * int -> int * int) list -> exn) *
>>> >> (exn -> (int * int -> int * int) list)
>>> >> but an expression was expected of type
>>> >> int * ((< .. > as 'a) list -> exn) * (exn -> 'a list)
>>> >>
>>> >> The code in question:
>>> >>
>>> >> (fun id ->
>>> >> let m = Modifier.attach id in
>>> >> [ m Cast.total'k (fun (v,b) -> (v, max 1 (b-3))) (* <-- line
>>> >> 462
>>> >> *)
>>> >> ; m Lab.total'k (fun (v,b) -> (v, max 1 (b-3))) ])
>>> >>
>>> >> For reference, the signature of Modifier.attach:
>>> >> Db.key -> int * ('a list -> exn) * (exn -> 'a list) -> 'a ->
>>> >> Modifier.deleter
>>> >>
>>> >> OCaml version is 4.00.0 -- I know I should upgrade. Keep meaning to, I
>>> >> guess I will if I wake up and there's no helpful soul explaining what
>>> >> could
>>> >> be wrong here. :)
>>> >>
>>> >> Thank-you for any help. My eyes are starting to bug-out looking at
>>> >> this.
>>> >>
>>> >> -Tony
>>> >>
>>> >>
>>> >
>>
>>
>
^ permalink raw reply [flat|nested] 7+ messages in thread
* Re: [Caml-list] Types look compatible, but they aren't?
2013-04-13 17:14 ` Gabriel Scherer
@ 2013-04-13 17:25 ` Anthony Tavener
0 siblings, 0 replies; 7+ messages in thread
From: Anthony Tavener @ 2013-04-13 17:25 UTC (permalink / raw)
To: Gabriel Scherer; +Cc: Kakadu, caml-list
[-- Attachment #1: Type: text/plain, Size: 5357 bytes --]
In this instance it aquired a _ though, or does that have some other
meaning here?
I was getting < .. > at first, but when I called Modifer.attach with three
arguments the inference
changed to < _.. >.
As a side note, I didn't know what to make of < .. > until Kakadu mentioned
objects. I was thinking "what is that, some kind of abstract type"? That's
what I get for rarely using objects!
On Sat, Apr 13, 2013 at 11:14 AM, Gabriel Scherer <gabriel.scherer@gmail.com
> wrote:
> > So, 'a becomes: (< _.. > as 'a) -- I get some monomorphic... object?
>
> Just a small thing, (< .. > as 'a) is not monomorphic, it is still a
> polymorphic type, that may be instantiated with any object type. It is
> "less polymorphic" than 'a (can be instantiated with anything).
>
> On Sat, Apr 13, 2013 at 6:15 PM, Anthony Tavener
> <anthony.tavener@gmail.com> wrote:
> > I forgot to note, that the interesting thing was how the type inferred
> for
> > Modifier.attach when it had
> > one argument applied did not show the < _.. > monomorphic object
> constraint.
> > Modifier.attach
> > is actually a: fun id -> (key -> fn -> deleter), rather than a
> > straightforward three-argument function. Once
> > the (key -> fn -> deleter) function would come into play, the "object"
> was
> > revealed.
> >
> >
> > On Sat, Apr 13, 2013 at 10:07 AM, Anthony Tavener
> > <anthony.tavener@gmail.com> wrote:
> >>
> >> Ohhh... that is interesting. (TL;DR: problem solved, and it was from
> >> inappropriate Oo.id use.)
> >>
> >> Modifier.attach is actually implemented as a function of one argument
> >> which does some stuff,
> >> returning a function of two arguments, to avoid redundant lookups in the
> >> case of multiple "attach"
> >> to the same "id".
> >>
> >> When I remove the let m = ... and just inline "Modifer.attach id ..."
> the
> >> type of Modifier.attach changes to:
> >>
> >> Db.key -> int * (((< _.. > as 'a) list -> exn) * (exn -> 'a list) ->
> 'a
> >> -> Modifier.deleter
> >>
> >> So, 'a becomes: (< _.. > as 'a) -- I get some monomorphic... object?
> >>
> >> As I wrote this I had an idea and found the problem:
> >>
> >> ...
> >> (* return (tbl -> unit) function which deletes this specific function
> *)
> >> let del_id = Oo.id fn in
> >> (fun tbl ->
> >> let lst = List.filter (fun e -> Oo.id e <> del_id) (fn_list tbl) in
> >> Hashtbl.replace tbl tag (inj lst))
> >>
> >>
> >> Here, "fn" is the provided function, and I want an easy way to remove
> such
> >> functions uniquely from the
> >> mess of Hashtbl, universal embedding, and list. I tried a trick I once
> >> read Alain suggest for getting a
> >> unique id using the object module... and I guess that brought in this
> <..>
> >> thing I was unfamiliar with. :)
> >> Instead of Oo.id I'm using Hashtbl.hash now, which is normally what I'd
> >> do... not sure why I
> >> half-remembered some trick with Oo.id.
> >>
> >> Thank-you for looking at this, both of you. It helped me dig in the
> right
> >> direction!
> >>
> >>
> >> On Sat, Apr 13, 2013 at 1:33 AM, Gabriel Scherer
> >> <gabriel.scherer@gmail.com> wrote:
> >>>
> >>> This looks like a value restriction issue with
> >>>
> >>> let m = Modifier.attach id
> >>>
> >>> "A function obtained through partial application is not polymorphic
> >>> enough"
> >>> http://caml.inria.fr/resources/doc/faq/core.en.html#eta-expansion
> >>>
> >>> If this is indeed the source of your error, you can regain
> >>> type-checking by using instead
> >>>
> >>> let m total = Modifier.attach id total
> >>>
> >>> Note that this may change the semantics of your code if
> >>> (Modifier.attach id) does a side-effect before getting its next
> >>> parameter: if would have been effected only once with your previous
> >>> definition, and will be effected at each call of 'm' with the new
> >>> definition.
> >>>
> >>> On Sat, Apr 13, 2013 at 8:56 AM, Kakadu <kakadu.hafanana@gmail.com>
> >>> wrote:
> >>> > Maybe function type (int * int -> int * int) is incompatible with
> >>> > object
> >>> > type <..>?
> >>> >
> >>> > Kakadu
> >>> >
> >>> >
> >>> > On Sat, Apr 13, 2013 at 10:50 AM, Anthony Tavener
> >>> > <anthony.tavener@gmail.com> wrote:
> >>> >>
> >>> >> File "virtue.ml", line 462, characters 12-24:
> >>> >> Error: This expression has type
> >>> >> int * ((int * int -> int * int) list -> exn) *
> >>> >> (exn -> (int * int -> int * int) list)
> >>> >> but an expression was expected of type
> >>> >> int * ((< .. > as 'a) list -> exn) * (exn -> 'a list)
> >>> >>
> >>> >> The code in question:
> >>> >>
> >>> >> (fun id ->
> >>> >> let m = Modifier.attach id in
> >>> >> [ m Cast.total'k (fun (v,b) -> (v, max 1 (b-3))) (* <--
> line
> >>> >> 462
> >>> >> *)
> >>> >> ; m Lab.total'k (fun (v,b) -> (v, max 1 (b-3))) ])
> >>> >>
> >>> >> For reference, the signature of Modifier.attach:
> >>> >> Db.key -> int * ('a list -> exn) * (exn -> 'a list) -> 'a ->
> >>> >> Modifier.deleter
> >>> >>
> >>> >> OCaml version is 4.00.0 -- I know I should upgrade. Keep meaning
> to, I
> >>> >> guess I will if I wake up and there's no helpful soul explaining
> what
> >>> >> could
> >>> >> be wrong here. :)
> >>> >>
> >>> >> Thank-you for any help. My eyes are starting to bug-out looking at
> >>> >> this.
> >>> >>
> >>> >> -Tony
> >>> >>
> >>> >>
> >>> >
> >>
> >>
> >
>
[-- Attachment #2: Type: text/html, Size: 8051 bytes --]
^ permalink raw reply [flat|nested] 7+ messages in thread
end of thread, other threads:[~2013-04-13 17:26 UTC | newest]
Thread overview: 7+ messages (download: mbox.gz / follow: Atom feed)
-- links below jump to the message on this page --
2013-04-13 6:50 [Caml-list] Types look compatible, but they aren't? Anthony Tavener
2013-04-13 6:56 ` Kakadu
2013-04-13 7:33 ` Gabriel Scherer
2013-04-13 16:07 ` Anthony Tavener
2013-04-13 16:15 ` Anthony Tavener
2013-04-13 17:14 ` Gabriel Scherer
2013-04-13 17:25 ` Anthony Tavener
This is a public inbox, see mirroring instructions
for how to clone and mirror all data and code used for this inbox