* [Caml-list] Empty polymorphic variant set @ 2016-11-25 8:39 Julien Blond 2016-11-25 9:19 ` Ben Millwood 2016-11-25 9:20 ` Julien Blond 0 siblings, 2 replies; 14+ messages in thread From: Julien Blond @ 2016-11-25 8:39 UTC (permalink / raw) To: OCaml mailing-list [-- Attachment #1: Type: text/plain, Size: 389 bytes --] Hi, Let's try something : $ ocaml OCaml version 4.03.0 # let _ : [] list = [];; Characters 9-10: let _ : [] list = [];; Error: Syntax error # type empty = [];; type empty = [] # let _ : empty list = [];; - : empty list = [] # Does anyone know if there is a reason to forbid the empty polymorphic variant set in type expressions or if it's a bug ? Regards, -- Julien Blond [-- Attachment #2: Type: text/html, Size: 619 bytes --] ^ permalink raw reply [flat|nested] 14+ messages in thread
* Re: [Caml-list] Empty polymorphic variant set 2016-11-25 8:39 [Caml-list] Empty polymorphic variant set Julien Blond @ 2016-11-25 9:19 ` Ben Millwood 2016-11-25 9:20 ` Julien Blond 1 sibling, 0 replies; 14+ messages in thread From: Ben Millwood @ 2016-11-25 9:19 UTC (permalink / raw) To: Julien Blond; +Cc: OCaml mailing-list [-- Attachment #1: Type: text/plain, Size: 1107 bytes --] After playing around with this for a little while, it looks to me like type t = [] isn't defining t as a synonym for the empty polyvariant, but rather defining t to be an ADT with one constructor, []. In particular, note that type t = [] type s = [] let f (x : s) : t = x (* does not typecheck *) type r = t = [] (* parses fine, showing [] is a constructor *) let f [] = () (* no exhaustivity warnings, inferred type is f : r -> unit *) It's odd that [] is a valid constructor name, but I suppose we want it so for lists, and might as well let other people reuse it. On 25 November 2016 at 16:39, Julien Blond <julien.blond@gmail.com> wrote: > Hi, > > Let's try something : > > $ ocaml > OCaml version 4.03.0 > > # let _ : [] list = [];; > Characters 9-10: > let _ : [] list = [];; > > Error: Syntax error > # type empty = [];; > type empty = [] > # let _ : empty list = [];; > - : empty list = [] > # > > Does anyone know if there is a reason to forbid the empty polymorphic > variant set in type expressions or if it's a bug ? > > Regards, > > -- Julien Blond > [-- Attachment #2: Type: text/html, Size: 1792 bytes --] ^ permalink raw reply [flat|nested] 14+ messages in thread
* Re: [Caml-list] Empty polymorphic variant set 2016-11-25 8:39 [Caml-list] Empty polymorphic variant set Julien Blond 2016-11-25 9:19 ` Ben Millwood @ 2016-11-25 9:20 ` Julien Blond 2016-11-25 11:22 ` David Allsopp 1 sibling, 1 reply; 14+ messages in thread From: Julien Blond @ 2016-11-25 9:20 UTC (permalink / raw) To: OCaml mailing-list [-- Attachment #1: Type: text/plain, Size: 661 bytes --] Forget my question :) The [] is actually interpreted as a variant constructor, not a polymorphic variant set that must have an element at least. -- Julien Blond 2016-11-25 9:39 GMT+01:00 Julien Blond <julien.blond@gmail.com>: > Hi, > > Let's try something : > > $ ocaml > OCaml version 4.03.0 > > # let _ : [] list = [];; > Characters 9-10: > let _ : [] list = [];; > > Error: Syntax error > # type empty = [];; > type empty = [] > # let _ : empty list = [];; > - : empty list = [] > # > > Does anyone know if there is a reason to forbid the empty polymorphic > variant set in type expressions or if it's a bug ? > > Regards, > > -- Julien Blond > [-- Attachment #2: Type: text/html, Size: 1166 bytes --] ^ permalink raw reply [flat|nested] 14+ messages in thread
* RE: [Caml-list] Empty polymorphic variant set 2016-11-25 9:20 ` Julien Blond @ 2016-11-25 11:22 ` David Allsopp 2016-11-25 13:01 ` Julien Blond 0 siblings, 1 reply; 14+ messages in thread From: David Allsopp @ 2016-11-25 11:22 UTC (permalink / raw) To: Julien Blond, OCaml mailing-list Julien Blond wrote: > 2016-11-25 9:39 GMT+01:00 Julien Blond <mailto:julien.blond@gmail.com>: > Hi, > Let's try something : > $ ocaml > OCaml version 4.03.0 > > # let _ : [] list = [];; > Characters 9-10: > let _ : [] list = [];; > Error: Syntax error > # type empty = [];; > type empty = [] > # let _ : empty list = [];; > - : empty list = [] > # > > Does anyone know if there is a reason to forbid the empty polymorphic variant > set in type expressions or if it's a bug ? As you've observed, [] is a variant constructor since 4.03.0 - see GPR#234 (https://github.com/ocaml/ocaml/pull/234). The GPR contains references and comments as to the motivation for this. What's your desired use for the type of the non-extensible empty polymorphic variant? Possibly related, you can define a general type for a list of polymorphic variants: let (empty : [> ] list) = [] or let (length : [> ] list -> int) = List.length;; length [`Foo; `Bar];; length [42];; if that's what you were after? David ^ permalink raw reply [flat|nested] 14+ messages in thread
* Re: [Caml-list] Empty polymorphic variant set 2016-11-25 11:22 ` David Allsopp @ 2016-11-25 13:01 ` Julien Blond 2016-11-25 13:46 ` Gabriel Scherer 0 siblings, 1 reply; 14+ messages in thread From: Julien Blond @ 2016-11-25 13:01 UTC (permalink / raw) To: David Allsopp; +Cc: OCaml mailing-list [-- Attachment #1: Type: text/plain, Size: 1740 bytes --] Yes, i knew the variant constructor but, somehow i didn't realize i was precisely using it for my mind was focused on the polymorphic variant list :) In fact, i wondered if a generic result type like this type ('a, 'b) result = Ok of 'a | Error of 'b that we can see in several library could be used to specify a "safe" result which could have type something like ('a, []) result. One could encode 'b as some error list at type level but it needs some complicated type management and i'm targeting OCaml beginners for which i just want them to be careful about non nominal results. 2016-11-25 12:22 GMT+01:00 David Allsopp <dra-news@metastack.com>: > Julien Blond wrote: > > 2016-11-25 9:39 GMT+01:00 Julien Blond <mailto:julien.blond@gmail.com>: > > Hi, > > Let's try something : > > $ ocaml > > OCaml version 4.03.0 > > > > # let _ : [] list = [];; > > Characters 9-10: > > let _ : [] list = [];; > > Error: Syntax error > > # type empty = [];; > > type empty = [] > > # let _ : empty list = [];; > > - : empty list = [] > > # > > > > Does anyone know if there is a reason to forbid the empty polymorphic > variant > > set in type expressions or if it's a bug ? > > As you've observed, [] is a variant constructor since 4.03.0 - see GPR#234 > (https://github.com/ocaml/ocaml/pull/234). The GPR contains references > and comments as to the motivation for this. > > What's your desired use for the type of the non-extensible empty > polymorphic variant? > > Possibly related, you can define a general type for a list of polymorphic > variants: > > let (empty : [> ] list) = [] > > or > > let (length : [> ] list -> int) = List.length;; > length [`Foo; `Bar];; > length [42];; > > if that's what you were after? > > > David > [-- Attachment #2: Type: text/html, Size: 2578 bytes --] ^ permalink raw reply [flat|nested] 14+ messages in thread
* Re: [Caml-list] Empty polymorphic variant set 2016-11-25 13:01 ` Julien Blond @ 2016-11-25 13:46 ` Gabriel Scherer 2016-11-25 13:52 ` Andreas Rossberg 0 siblings, 1 reply; 14+ messages in thread From: Gabriel Scherer @ 2016-11-25 13:46 UTC (permalink / raw) To: Julien Blond; +Cc: David Allsopp, OCaml mailing-list I would agree that OCaml lacks a convenient way to define the empty type. (It used to be possible using the revised syntax, which uses braces to delimit (non-polymorphic) variant definitions, but this was ruled out by sanity checks introduced in OCaml 4.02). One way is to use GADTs to create an impossible type: type 'a onlybool = Bool : bool onlybool type empty = int onlybool let extract : ('a, empty) result -> 'a = function Ok x -> x Since 4.03 (April 2016), it is possible to explicitly write a so-called "refutation case", of the form "<pattern> -> .", to say that a given case cannot happen -- it is an error if the type-checker cannot verify it: https://caml.inria.fr/pub/docs/manual-ocaml/extn.html#sec241 let extract : ('a, empty) result -> 'a = function | Ok x -> x | Error _ -> . I would support the idea of having a built-in "empty" type to represent a variant type with no constructor -- but then I am probably biased in favor of the empty type. On Fri, Nov 25, 2016 at 8:01 AM, Julien Blond <julien.blond@gmail.com> wrote: > Yes, i knew the variant constructor but, somehow i didn't realize i was > precisely using it for my mind was focused on the polymorphic variant list > :) > > In fact, i wondered if a generic result type like this > > type ('a, 'b) result = Ok of 'a | Error of 'b > > that we can see in several library could be used to specify a "safe" result > which could have type something like ('a, []) result. One could encode 'b as > some error list at type level but it needs some complicated type management > and i'm targeting OCaml beginners for which i just want them to be careful > about non nominal results. > > > 2016-11-25 12:22 GMT+01:00 David Allsopp <dra-news@metastack.com>: >> >> Julien Blond wrote: >> > 2016-11-25 9:39 GMT+01:00 Julien Blond <mailto:julien.blond@gmail.com>: >> > Hi, >> > Let's try something : >> > $ ocaml >> > OCaml version 4.03.0 >> > >> > # let _ : [] list = [];; >> > Characters 9-10: >> > let _ : [] list = [];; >> > Error: Syntax error >> > # type empty = [];; >> > type empty = [] >> > # let _ : empty list = [];; >> > - : empty list = [] >> > # >> > >> > Does anyone know if there is a reason to forbid the empty polymorphic >> > variant >> > set in type expressions or if it's a bug ? >> >> As you've observed, [] is a variant constructor since 4.03.0 - see GPR#234 >> (https://github.com/ocaml/ocaml/pull/234). The GPR contains references and >> comments as to the motivation for this. >> >> What's your desired use for the type of the non-extensible empty >> polymorphic variant? >> >> Possibly related, you can define a general type for a list of polymorphic >> variants: >> >> let (empty : [> ] list) = [] >> >> or >> >> let (length : [> ] list -> int) = List.length;; >> length [`Foo; `Bar];; >> length [42];; >> >> if that's what you were after? >> >> >> David > > ^ permalink raw reply [flat|nested] 14+ messages in thread
* Re: [Caml-list] Empty polymorphic variant set 2016-11-25 13:46 ` Gabriel Scherer @ 2016-11-25 13:52 ` Andreas Rossberg 2016-11-25 15:42 ` Markus Mottl ` (2 more replies) 0 siblings, 3 replies; 14+ messages in thread From: Andreas Rossberg @ 2016-11-25 13:52 UTC (permalink / raw) To: Gabriel Scherer; +Cc: Julien Blond, David Allsopp, OCaml mailing-list > On Nov 25, 2016, at 14:46 , Gabriel Scherer <gabriel.scherer@gmail.com> wrote: > > I would agree that OCaml lacks a convenient way to define the empty > type. Isn’t type empty (as a definition) a sufficiently convenient way to define an empty type? /Andreas > (It used to be possible using the revised syntax, which uses > braces to delimit (non-polymorphic) variant definitions, but this was > ruled out by sanity checks introduced in OCaml 4.02). > > One way is to use GADTs to create an impossible type: > > type 'a onlybool = Bool : bool onlybool > type empty = int onlybool > > let extract : ('a, empty) result -> 'a = function Ok x -> x > > Since 4.03 (April 2016), it is possible to explicitly write a > so-called "refutation case", of the form "<pattern> -> .", to say that > a given case cannot happen -- it is an error if the type-checker > cannot verify it: > > https://caml.inria.fr/pub/docs/manual-ocaml/extn.html#sec241 > > let extract : ('a, empty) result -> 'a = function > | Ok x -> x > | Error _ -> . > > I would support the idea of having a built-in "empty" type to > represent a variant type with no constructor -- but then I am probably > biased in favor of the empty type. > > > On Fri, Nov 25, 2016 at 8:01 AM, Julien Blond <julien.blond@gmail.com> wrote: >> Yes, i knew the variant constructor but, somehow i didn't realize i was >> precisely using it for my mind was focused on the polymorphic variant list >> :) >> >> In fact, i wondered if a generic result type like this >> >> type ('a, 'b) result = Ok of 'a | Error of 'b >> >> that we can see in several library could be used to specify a "safe" result >> which could have type something like ('a, []) result. One could encode 'b as >> some error list at type level but it needs some complicated type management >> and i'm targeting OCaml beginners for which i just want them to be careful >> about non nominal results. >> >> >> 2016-11-25 12:22 GMT+01:00 David Allsopp <dra-news@metastack.com>: >>> >>> Julien Blond wrote: >>>> 2016-11-25 9:39 GMT+01:00 Julien Blond <mailto:julien.blond@gmail.com>: >>>> Hi, >>>> Let's try something : >>>> $ ocaml >>>> OCaml version 4.03.0 >>>> >>>> # let _ : [] list = [];; >>>> Characters 9-10: >>>> let _ : [] list = [];; >>>> Error: Syntax error >>>> # type empty = [];; >>>> type empty = [] >>>> # let _ : empty list = [];; >>>> - : empty list = [] >>>> # >>>> >>>> Does anyone know if there is a reason to forbid the empty polymorphic >>>> variant >>>> set in type expressions or if it's a bug ? >>> >>> As you've observed, [] is a variant constructor since 4.03.0 - see GPR#234 >>> (https://github.com/ocaml/ocaml/pull/234). The GPR contains references and >>> comments as to the motivation for this. >>> >>> What's your desired use for the type of the non-extensible empty >>> polymorphic variant? >>> >>> Possibly related, you can define a general type for a list of polymorphic >>> variants: >>> >>> let (empty : [> ] list) = [] >>> >>> or >>> >>> let (length : [> ] list -> int) = List.length;; >>> length [`Foo; `Bar];; >>> length [42];; >>> >>> if that's what you were after? >>> >>> >>> David >> >> > > -- > Caml-list mailing list. Subscription management and archives: > https://sympa.inria.fr/sympa/arc/caml-list > Beginner's list: http://groups.yahoo.com/group/ocaml_beginners > Bug reports: http://caml.inria.fr/bin/caml-bugs ^ permalink raw reply [flat|nested] 14+ messages in thread
* Re: [Caml-list] Empty polymorphic variant set 2016-11-25 13:52 ` Andreas Rossberg @ 2016-11-25 15:42 ` Markus Mottl 2016-11-25 15:46 ` Gabriel Scherer 2016-11-25 16:50 ` Stephen Dolan 2 siblings, 0 replies; 14+ messages in thread From: Markus Mottl @ 2016-11-25 15:42 UTC (permalink / raw) To: Andreas Rossberg Cc: Gabriel Scherer, Julien Blond, David Allsopp, OCaml mailing-list My preferred way of representing the empty type is as follows: type void = { void : 'a. 'a } This allows you to do: type t = A | B of void let f = function | A -> "A" | B { void } -> void This can come in handy for e.g. partially implementing type definitions. Instead of raising exceptions in branches you cannot implement yet, you just simply return "void", which unifies with anything. Since there is provably no way to create a value that would end up in that branch, this is safe. Once you complete the argument definition for tag B, the compiler will detect all code locations that depend on that branch. On Fri, Nov 25, 2016 at 8:52 AM, Andreas Rossberg <rossberg@mpi-sws.org> wrote: > >> On Nov 25, 2016, at 14:46 , Gabriel Scherer <gabriel.scherer@gmail.com> wrote: >> >> I would agree that OCaml lacks a convenient way to define the empty >> type. > > Isn’t > > type empty > > (as a definition) a sufficiently convenient way to define an empty type? > > /Andreas > >> (It used to be possible using the revised syntax, which uses >> braces to delimit (non-polymorphic) variant definitions, but this was >> ruled out by sanity checks introduced in OCaml 4.02). >> >> One way is to use GADTs to create an impossible type: >> >> type 'a onlybool = Bool : bool onlybool >> type empty = int onlybool >> >> let extract : ('a, empty) result -> 'a = function Ok x -> x >> >> Since 4.03 (April 2016), it is possible to explicitly write a >> so-called "refutation case", of the form "<pattern> -> .", to say that >> a given case cannot happen -- it is an error if the type-checker >> cannot verify it: >> >> https://caml.inria.fr/pub/docs/manual-ocaml/extn.html#sec241 >> >> let extract : ('a, empty) result -> 'a = function >> | Ok x -> x >> | Error _ -> . >> >> I would support the idea of having a built-in "empty" type to >> represent a variant type with no constructor -- but then I am probably >> biased in favor of the empty type. >> >> >> On Fri, Nov 25, 2016 at 8:01 AM, Julien Blond <julien.blond@gmail.com> wrote: >>> Yes, i knew the variant constructor but, somehow i didn't realize i was >>> precisely using it for my mind was focused on the polymorphic variant list >>> :) >>> >>> In fact, i wondered if a generic result type like this >>> >>> type ('a, 'b) result = Ok of 'a | Error of 'b >>> >>> that we can see in several library could be used to specify a "safe" result >>> which could have type something like ('a, []) result. One could encode 'b as >>> some error list at type level but it needs some complicated type management >>> and i'm targeting OCaml beginners for which i just want them to be careful >>> about non nominal results. >>> >>> >>> 2016-11-25 12:22 GMT+01:00 David Allsopp <dra-news@metastack.com>: >>>> >>>> Julien Blond wrote: >>>>> 2016-11-25 9:39 GMT+01:00 Julien Blond <mailto:julien.blond@gmail.com>: >>>>> Hi, >>>>> Let's try something : >>>>> $ ocaml >>>>> OCaml version 4.03.0 >>>>> >>>>> # let _ : [] list = [];; >>>>> Characters 9-10: >>>>> let _ : [] list = [];; >>>>> Error: Syntax error >>>>> # type empty = [];; >>>>> type empty = [] >>>>> # let _ : empty list = [];; >>>>> - : empty list = [] >>>>> # >>>>> >>>>> Does anyone know if there is a reason to forbid the empty polymorphic >>>>> variant >>>>> set in type expressions or if it's a bug ? >>>> >>>> As you've observed, [] is a variant constructor since 4.03.0 - see GPR#234 >>>> (https://github.com/ocaml/ocaml/pull/234). The GPR contains references and >>>> comments as to the motivation for this. >>>> >>>> What's your desired use for the type of the non-extensible empty >>>> polymorphic variant? >>>> >>>> Possibly related, you can define a general type for a list of polymorphic >>>> variants: >>>> >>>> let (empty : [> ] list) = [] >>>> >>>> or >>>> >>>> let (length : [> ] list -> int) = List.length;; >>>> length [`Foo; `Bar];; >>>> length [42];; >>>> >>>> if that's what you were after? >>>> >>>> >>>> David >>> >>> >> >> -- >> Caml-list mailing list. Subscription management and archives: >> https://sympa.inria.fr/sympa/arc/caml-list >> Beginner's list: http://groups.yahoo.com/group/ocaml_beginners >> Bug reports: http://caml.inria.fr/bin/caml-bugs > > > -- > Caml-list mailing list. Subscription management and archives: > https://sympa.inria.fr/sympa/arc/caml-list > Beginner's list: http://groups.yahoo.com/group/ocaml_beginners > Bug reports: http://caml.inria.fr/bin/caml-bugs -- Markus Mottl http://www.ocaml.info markus.mottl@gmail.com ^ permalink raw reply [flat|nested] 14+ messages in thread
* Re: [Caml-list] Empty polymorphic variant set 2016-11-25 13:52 ` Andreas Rossberg 2016-11-25 15:42 ` Markus Mottl @ 2016-11-25 15:46 ` Gabriel Scherer 2016-11-25 15:59 ` Yaron Minsky 2016-11-25 16:50 ` Stephen Dolan 2 siblings, 1 reply; 14+ messages in thread From: Gabriel Scherer @ 2016-11-25 15:46 UTC (permalink / raw) To: Andreas Rossberg; +Cc: Julien Blond, David Allsopp, OCaml mailing-list > Isn’t [an abstract type definition] a sufficiently convenient way to define an empty type? It is not, because this is treated as a type whose definition is unknown, rather that as a type that is known to have no inhabitant. This is of course the only possible interpretation when (type empty) occurs in a signature/declaration; but I think that having abstract definitions be interpreted essentially as abstract declarations is good design -- although I'm not completely sure how close exactly the type-checker considers them today. I also believe that this kind of declarations is used to define types populated by the FFI -- with values coming from C -- which justifies this stricter interpretation. I forgot to point out, in my message above, that the (Error _ -> .) case expresses intent, but is not necessary as the type-checker (in recent OCaml versions) understands that the pattern-matching without this case is exhaustive. One way to notice the difference is to try with Andreas' definition, which the type-checker complains about: # type empty;; # let extract : ('a, empty) result -> 'a = function Ok x -> x;; Warning 8: this pattern-matching is not exhaustive. Here is an example of a case that is not matched: Error _ val extract : ('a, empty) result -> 'a = <fun> On Fri, Nov 25, 2016 at 8:52 AM, Andreas Rossberg <rossberg@mpi-sws.org> wrote: > >> On Nov 25, 2016, at 14:46 , Gabriel Scherer <gabriel.scherer@gmail.com> wrote: >> >> I would agree that OCaml lacks a convenient way to define the empty >> type. > > Isn’t > > type empty > > (as a definition) a sufficiently convenient way to define an empty type? > > /Andreas > >> (It used to be possible using the revised syntax, which uses >> braces to delimit (non-polymorphic) variant definitions, but this was >> ruled out by sanity checks introduced in OCaml 4.02). >> >> One way is to use GADTs to create an impossible type: >> >> type 'a onlybool = Bool : bool onlybool >> type empty = int onlybool >> >> let extract : ('a, empty) result -> 'a = function Ok x -> x >> >> Since 4.03 (April 2016), it is possible to explicitly write a >> so-called "refutation case", of the form "<pattern> -> .", to say that >> a given case cannot happen -- it is an error if the type-checker >> cannot verify it: >> >> https://caml.inria.fr/pub/docs/manual-ocaml/extn.html#sec241 >> >> let extract : ('a, empty) result -> 'a = function >> | Ok x -> x >> | Error _ -> . >> >> I would support the idea of having a built-in "empty" type to >> represent a variant type with no constructor -- but then I am probably >> biased in favor of the empty type. >> >> >> On Fri, Nov 25, 2016 at 8:01 AM, Julien Blond <julien.blond@gmail.com> wrote: >>> Yes, i knew the variant constructor but, somehow i didn't realize i was >>> precisely using it for my mind was focused on the polymorphic variant list >>> :) >>> >>> In fact, i wondered if a generic result type like this >>> >>> type ('a, 'b) result = Ok of 'a | Error of 'b >>> >>> that we can see in several library could be used to specify a "safe" result >>> which could have type something like ('a, []) result. One could encode 'b as >>> some error list at type level but it needs some complicated type management >>> and i'm targeting OCaml beginners for which i just want them to be careful >>> about non nominal results. >>> >>> >>> 2016-11-25 12:22 GMT+01:00 David Allsopp <dra-news@metastack.com>: >>>> >>>> Julien Blond wrote: >>>>> 2016-11-25 9:39 GMT+01:00 Julien Blond <mailto:julien.blond@gmail.com>: >>>>> Hi, >>>>> Let's try something : >>>>> $ ocaml >>>>> OCaml version 4.03.0 >>>>> >>>>> # let _ : [] list = [];; >>>>> Characters 9-10: >>>>> let _ : [] list = [];; >>>>> Error: Syntax error >>>>> # type empty = [];; >>>>> type empty = [] >>>>> # let _ : empty list = [];; >>>>> - : empty list = [] >>>>> # >>>>> >>>>> Does anyone know if there is a reason to forbid the empty polymorphic >>>>> variant >>>>> set in type expressions or if it's a bug ? >>>> >>>> As you've observed, [] is a variant constructor since 4.03.0 - see GPR#234 >>>> (https://github.com/ocaml/ocaml/pull/234). The GPR contains references and >>>> comments as to the motivation for this. >>>> >>>> What's your desired use for the type of the non-extensible empty >>>> polymorphic variant? >>>> >>>> Possibly related, you can define a general type for a list of polymorphic >>>> variants: >>>> >>>> let (empty : [> ] list) = [] >>>> >>>> or >>>> >>>> let (length : [> ] list -> int) = List.length;; >>>> length [`Foo; `Bar];; >>>> length [42];; >>>> >>>> if that's what you were after? >>>> >>>> >>>> David >>> >>> >> >> -- >> Caml-list mailing list. Subscription management and archives: >> https://sympa.inria.fr/sympa/arc/caml-list >> Beginner's list: http://groups.yahoo.com/group/ocaml_beginners >> Bug reports: http://caml.inria.fr/bin/caml-bugs > ^ permalink raw reply [flat|nested] 14+ messages in thread
* Re: [Caml-list] Empty polymorphic variant set 2016-11-25 15:46 ` Gabriel Scherer @ 2016-11-25 15:59 ` Yaron Minsky 2016-11-25 16:42 ` Markus Mottl 0 siblings, 1 reply; 14+ messages in thread From: Yaron Minsky @ 2016-11-25 15:59 UTC (permalink / raw) To: Gabriel Scherer Cc: Andreas Rossberg, Julien Blond, David Allsopp, OCaml mailing-list For what it's worth, Core_kernel's Nothing.t type is an impossible type in Gabriel's sense. It effectively uses this pattern: module Equal = struct type (_,_) t = Equal : ('a,'a) t end type nothing = (unit,int) Equal.t let f (x:(unit,nothing) result) = match x with | Ok () -> () On Fri, Nov 25, 2016 at 10:46 AM, Gabriel Scherer <gabriel.scherer@gmail.com> wrote: >> Isn’t [an abstract type definition] a sufficiently convenient way to define an empty type? > > It is not, because this is treated as a type whose definition is > unknown, rather that as a type that is known to have no inhabitant. > This is of course the only possible interpretation when (type empty) > occurs in a signature/declaration; but I think that having abstract > definitions be interpreted essentially as abstract declarations is > good design -- although I'm not completely sure how close exactly the > type-checker considers them today. > > I also believe that this kind of declarations is used to define types > populated by the FFI -- with values coming from C -- which justifies > this stricter interpretation. > > I forgot to point out, in my message above, that the (Error _ -> .) > case expresses intent, but is not necessary as the type-checker (in > recent OCaml versions) understands that the pattern-matching without > this case is exhaustive. One way to notice the difference is to try > with Andreas' definition, which the type-checker complains about: > > # type empty;; > # let extract : ('a, empty) result -> 'a = function Ok x -> x;; > Warning 8: this pattern-matching is not exhaustive. > Here is an example of a case that is not matched: > Error _ > val extract : ('a, empty) result -> 'a = <fun> > > On Fri, Nov 25, 2016 at 8:52 AM, Andreas Rossberg <rossberg@mpi-sws.org> wrote: >> >>> On Nov 25, 2016, at 14:46 , Gabriel Scherer <gabriel.scherer@gmail.com> wrote: >>> >>> I would agree that OCaml lacks a convenient way to define the empty >>> type. >> >> Isn’t >> >> type empty >> >> (as a definition) a sufficiently convenient way to define an empty type? >> >> /Andreas >> >>> (It used to be possible using the revised syntax, which uses >>> braces to delimit (non-polymorphic) variant definitions, but this was >>> ruled out by sanity checks introduced in OCaml 4.02). >>> >>> One way is to use GADTs to create an impossible type: >>> >>> type 'a onlybool = Bool : bool onlybool >>> type empty = int onlybool >>> >>> let extract : ('a, empty) result -> 'a = function Ok x -> x >>> >>> Since 4.03 (April 2016), it is possible to explicitly write a >>> so-called "refutation case", of the form "<pattern> -> .", to say that >>> a given case cannot happen -- it is an error if the type-checker >>> cannot verify it: >>> >>> https://caml.inria.fr/pub/docs/manual-ocaml/extn.html#sec241 >>> >>> let extract : ('a, empty) result -> 'a = function >>> | Ok x -> x >>> | Error _ -> . >>> >>> I would support the idea of having a built-in "empty" type to >>> represent a variant type with no constructor -- but then I am probably >>> biased in favor of the empty type. >>> >>> >>> On Fri, Nov 25, 2016 at 8:01 AM, Julien Blond <julien.blond@gmail.com> wrote: >>>> Yes, i knew the variant constructor but, somehow i didn't realize i was >>>> precisely using it for my mind was focused on the polymorphic variant list >>>> :) >>>> >>>> In fact, i wondered if a generic result type like this >>>> >>>> type ('a, 'b) result = Ok of 'a | Error of 'b >>>> >>>> that we can see in several library could be used to specify a "safe" result >>>> which could have type something like ('a, []) result. One could encode 'b as >>>> some error list at type level but it needs some complicated type management >>>> and i'm targeting OCaml beginners for which i just want them to be careful >>>> about non nominal results. >>>> >>>> >>>> 2016-11-25 12:22 GMT+01:00 David Allsopp <dra-news@metastack.com>: >>>>> >>>>> Julien Blond wrote: >>>>>> 2016-11-25 9:39 GMT+01:00 Julien Blond <mailto:julien.blond@gmail.com>: >>>>>> Hi, >>>>>> Let's try something : >>>>>> $ ocaml >>>>>> OCaml version 4.03.0 >>>>>> >>>>>> # let _ : [] list = [];; >>>>>> Characters 9-10: >>>>>> let _ : [] list = [];; >>>>>> Error: Syntax error >>>>>> # type empty = [];; >>>>>> type empty = [] >>>>>> # let _ : empty list = [];; >>>>>> - : empty list = [] >>>>>> # >>>>>> >>>>>> Does anyone know if there is a reason to forbid the empty polymorphic >>>>>> variant >>>>>> set in type expressions or if it's a bug ? >>>>> >>>>> As you've observed, [] is a variant constructor since 4.03.0 - see GPR#234 >>>>> (https://github.com/ocaml/ocaml/pull/234). The GPR contains references and >>>>> comments as to the motivation for this. >>>>> >>>>> What's your desired use for the type of the non-extensible empty >>>>> polymorphic variant? >>>>> >>>>> Possibly related, you can define a general type for a list of polymorphic >>>>> variants: >>>>> >>>>> let (empty : [> ] list) = [] >>>>> >>>>> or >>>>> >>>>> let (length : [> ] list -> int) = List.length;; >>>>> length [`Foo; `Bar];; >>>>> length [42];; >>>>> >>>>> if that's what you were after? >>>>> >>>>> >>>>> David >>>> >>>> >>> >>> -- >>> Caml-list mailing list. Subscription management and archives: >>> https://sympa.inria.fr/sympa/arc/caml-list >>> Beginner's list: http://groups.yahoo.com/group/ocaml_beginners >>> Bug reports: http://caml.inria.fr/bin/caml-bugs >> > > -- > Caml-list mailing list. Subscription management and archives: > https://sympa.inria.fr/sympa/arc/caml-list > Beginner's list: http://groups.yahoo.com/group/ocaml_beginners > Bug reports: http://caml.inria.fr/bin/caml-bugs ^ permalink raw reply [flat|nested] 14+ messages in thread
* Re: [Caml-list] Empty polymorphic variant set 2016-11-25 15:59 ` Yaron Minsky @ 2016-11-25 16:42 ` Markus Mottl 2016-11-25 17:11 ` Gabriel Scherer 0 siblings, 1 reply; 14+ messages in thread From: Markus Mottl @ 2016-11-25 16:42 UTC (permalink / raw) To: Yaron Minsky Cc: Gabriel Scherer, Andreas Rossberg, Julien Blond, David Allsopp, OCaml mailing-list Interesting, somehow it had escaped my attention that match case elimination also applies to ordinary sum types if they have GADT arguments. I thought that this was only supported for GADTs. In that case the "nothing" approach, though requiring an explicit type annotation, might be an even neater solution. I wonder whether the type checker could be made to identify such match case elimination opportunities with the previously mentioned "empty" and "void" type definitions, too, which are obviously unpopulated. On Fri, Nov 25, 2016 at 10:59 AM, Yaron Minsky <yminsky@janestreet.com> wrote: > For what it's worth, Core_kernel's Nothing.t type is an impossible > type in Gabriel's sense. It effectively uses this pattern: > > module Equal = struct > type (_,_) t = Equal : ('a,'a) t > end > > type nothing = (unit,int) Equal.t > > let f (x:(unit,nothing) result) = > match x with > | Ok () -> () > > On Fri, Nov 25, 2016 at 10:46 AM, Gabriel Scherer > <gabriel.scherer@gmail.com> wrote: >>> Isn’t [an abstract type definition] a sufficiently convenient way to define an empty type? >> >> It is not, because this is treated as a type whose definition is >> unknown, rather that as a type that is known to have no inhabitant. >> This is of course the only possible interpretation when (type empty) >> occurs in a signature/declaration; but I think that having abstract >> definitions be interpreted essentially as abstract declarations is >> good design -- although I'm not completely sure how close exactly the >> type-checker considers them today. >> >> I also believe that this kind of declarations is used to define types >> populated by the FFI -- with values coming from C -- which justifies >> this stricter interpretation. >> >> I forgot to point out, in my message above, that the (Error _ -> .) >> case expresses intent, but is not necessary as the type-checker (in >> recent OCaml versions) understands that the pattern-matching without >> this case is exhaustive. One way to notice the difference is to try >> with Andreas' definition, which the type-checker complains about: >> >> # type empty;; >> # let extract : ('a, empty) result -> 'a = function Ok x -> x;; >> Warning 8: this pattern-matching is not exhaustive. >> Here is an example of a case that is not matched: >> Error _ >> val extract : ('a, empty) result -> 'a = <fun> >> >> On Fri, Nov 25, 2016 at 8:52 AM, Andreas Rossberg <rossberg@mpi-sws.org> wrote: >>> >>>> On Nov 25, 2016, at 14:46 , Gabriel Scherer <gabriel.scherer@gmail.com> wrote: >>>> >>>> I would agree that OCaml lacks a convenient way to define the empty >>>> type. >>> >>> Isn’t >>> >>> type empty >>> >>> (as a definition) a sufficiently convenient way to define an empty type? >>> >>> /Andreas >>> >>>> (It used to be possible using the revised syntax, which uses >>>> braces to delimit (non-polymorphic) variant definitions, but this was >>>> ruled out by sanity checks introduced in OCaml 4.02). >>>> >>>> One way is to use GADTs to create an impossible type: >>>> >>>> type 'a onlybool = Bool : bool onlybool >>>> type empty = int onlybool >>>> >>>> let extract : ('a, empty) result -> 'a = function Ok x -> x >>>> >>>> Since 4.03 (April 2016), it is possible to explicitly write a >>>> so-called "refutation case", of the form "<pattern> -> .", to say that >>>> a given case cannot happen -- it is an error if the type-checker >>>> cannot verify it: >>>> >>>> https://caml.inria.fr/pub/docs/manual-ocaml/extn.html#sec241 >>>> >>>> let extract : ('a, empty) result -> 'a = function >>>> | Ok x -> x >>>> | Error _ -> . >>>> >>>> I would support the idea of having a built-in "empty" type to >>>> represent a variant type with no constructor -- but then I am probably >>>> biased in favor of the empty type. >>>> >>>> >>>> On Fri, Nov 25, 2016 at 8:01 AM, Julien Blond <julien.blond@gmail.com> wrote: >>>>> Yes, i knew the variant constructor but, somehow i didn't realize i was >>>>> precisely using it for my mind was focused on the polymorphic variant list >>>>> :) >>>>> >>>>> In fact, i wondered if a generic result type like this >>>>> >>>>> type ('a, 'b) result = Ok of 'a | Error of 'b >>>>> >>>>> that we can see in several library could be used to specify a "safe" result >>>>> which could have type something like ('a, []) result. One could encode 'b as >>>>> some error list at type level but it needs some complicated type management >>>>> and i'm targeting OCaml beginners for which i just want them to be careful >>>>> about non nominal results. >>>>> >>>>> >>>>> 2016-11-25 12:22 GMT+01:00 David Allsopp <dra-news@metastack.com>: >>>>>> >>>>>> Julien Blond wrote: >>>>>>> 2016-11-25 9:39 GMT+01:00 Julien Blond <mailto:julien.blond@gmail.com>: >>>>>>> Hi, >>>>>>> Let's try something : >>>>>>> $ ocaml >>>>>>> OCaml version 4.03.0 >>>>>>> >>>>>>> # let _ : [] list = [];; >>>>>>> Characters 9-10: >>>>>>> let _ : [] list = [];; >>>>>>> Error: Syntax error >>>>>>> # type empty = [];; >>>>>>> type empty = [] >>>>>>> # let _ : empty list = [];; >>>>>>> - : empty list = [] >>>>>>> # >>>>>>> >>>>>>> Does anyone know if there is a reason to forbid the empty polymorphic >>>>>>> variant >>>>>>> set in type expressions or if it's a bug ? >>>>>> >>>>>> As you've observed, [] is a variant constructor since 4.03.0 - see GPR#234 >>>>>> (https://github.com/ocaml/ocaml/pull/234). The GPR contains references and >>>>>> comments as to the motivation for this. >>>>>> >>>>>> What's your desired use for the type of the non-extensible empty >>>>>> polymorphic variant? >>>>>> >>>>>> Possibly related, you can define a general type for a list of polymorphic >>>>>> variants: >>>>>> >>>>>> let (empty : [> ] list) = [] >>>>>> >>>>>> or >>>>>> >>>>>> let (length : [> ] list -> int) = List.length;; >>>>>> length [`Foo; `Bar];; >>>>>> length [42];; >>>>>> >>>>>> if that's what you were after? >>>>>> >>>>>> >>>>>> David >>>>> >>>>> >>>> >>>> -- >>>> Caml-list mailing list. Subscription management and archives: >>>> https://sympa.inria.fr/sympa/arc/caml-list >>>> Beginner's list: http://groups.yahoo.com/group/ocaml_beginners >>>> Bug reports: http://caml.inria.fr/bin/caml-bugs >>> >> >> -- >> Caml-list mailing list. Subscription management and archives: >> https://sympa.inria.fr/sympa/arc/caml-list >> Beginner's list: http://groups.yahoo.com/group/ocaml_beginners >> Bug reports: http://caml.inria.fr/bin/caml-bugs > > -- > Caml-list mailing list. Subscription management and archives: > https://sympa.inria.fr/sympa/arc/caml-list > Beginner's list: http://groups.yahoo.com/group/ocaml_beginners > Bug reports: http://caml.inria.fr/bin/caml-bugs -- Markus Mottl http://www.ocaml.info markus.mottl@gmail.com ^ permalink raw reply [flat|nested] 14+ messages in thread
* Re: [Caml-list] Empty polymorphic variant set 2016-11-25 16:42 ` Markus Mottl @ 2016-11-25 17:11 ` Gabriel Scherer 0 siblings, 0 replies; 14+ messages in thread From: Gabriel Scherer @ 2016-11-25 17:11 UTC (permalink / raw) To: Markus Mottl Cc: Yaron Minsky, Andreas Rossberg, Julien Blond, David Allsopp, OCaml mailing-list On Fri, Nov 25, 2016 at 11:42 AM, Markus Mottl <markus.mottl@gmail.com> wrote: > Interesting, somehow it had escaped my attention that match case > elimination also applies to ordinary sum types if they have GADT > arguments. I thought that this was only supported for GADTs. In that > case the "nothing" approach, though requiring an explicit type > annotation, might be an even neater solution. It used to be the case that the only way to get the type-checker to reason on which constructors of a GADT can or cannot happen from type information was to have one of the constructors of this GADT to occur explicitly in the pattern-matching. The code above would thus have beeen warned as non-exhaustive as the type-checker could not "see" that the missing case, namely _, was in fact equivalent to (Error _), and that there was no possible constructor to fill that last wildcard. (Doing a case-analysis on the possible patterns a "_" could be decomposed into is called "exploding" the wildcard.) Jacques Garrigue gave at talk at the 2015 ML workshop on the question of: how much wildcard should we explode when analyzing pattern-matchings? GADTs and exhaustiveness: looking for the impossible Jacques Garrigue and Jacques Le Normand 2015 http://www.mlworkshop.org/gadts-and-exhaustiveness-looking-for-the-impossible.pdf https://youtu.be/vyZ4Bvogil4 If we explode wildcards as long as the type says we can, we can non-terminate on recursive types. If we explode wildcard too much, the performance of type-checking can suffer a lot. If we don't explode enough, we are unable to check exhaustiveness effectively. Jacques and Jacques' idea was to let people write pattern to say "this case cannot happen", and that would serve two roles at once: indicate author's intent in tricky case (an aspect of language design whose importance cannot be understated), and also serve as "exploding hints" for the type-checker, who would explode as deeply as those refutation patterns directed it to -- plus one more, if I remember correctly. This is highly similar to Agda's "absurd patterns". The rest of the discussion, including a lengthy but ultimately fairly satisfying syntax bike-shedding session, can be found on Mantis: https://caml.inria.fr/mantis/view.php?id=6437 > I wonder whether the type checker could be made to identify such match > case elimination opportunities with the previously mentioned "empty" > and "void" type definitions, too, which are obviously unpopulated. I think we don't want to be in the business of arbitrary proof search for emptyness or inhabitation. For GADTs there are well-understood notion of equations, (in)compatible types that naturally lead to the type-checker detecting some cases as impossible -- so these "elimination opportunities" are intrisic to GADTs as a feature. Adding heuristics to detect other notions of non-inhabitation sounds risky. Do we have strong use-cases for this? > On Fri, Nov 25, 2016 at 10:59 AM, Yaron Minsky <yminsky@janestreet.com> wrote: >> For what it's worth, Core_kernel's Nothing.t type is an impossible >> type in Gabriel's sense. It effectively uses this pattern: >> >> module Equal = struct >> type (_,_) t = Equal : ('a,'a) t >> end >> >> type nothing = (unit,int) Equal.t >> >> let f (x:(unit,nothing) result) = >> match x with >> | Ok () -> () >> >> On Fri, Nov 25, 2016 at 10:46 AM, Gabriel Scherer >> <gabriel.scherer@gmail.com> wrote: >>>> Isn’t [an abstract type definition] a sufficiently convenient way to define an empty type? >>> >>> It is not, because this is treated as a type whose definition is >>> unknown, rather that as a type that is known to have no inhabitant. >>> This is of course the only possible interpretation when (type empty) >>> occurs in a signature/declaration; but I think that having abstract >>> definitions be interpreted essentially as abstract declarations is >>> good design -- although I'm not completely sure how close exactly the >>> type-checker considers them today. >>> >>> I also believe that this kind of declarations is used to define types >>> populated by the FFI -- with values coming from C -- which justifies >>> this stricter interpretation. >>> >>> I forgot to point out, in my message above, that the (Error _ -> .) >>> case expresses intent, but is not necessary as the type-checker (in >>> recent OCaml versions) understands that the pattern-matching without >>> this case is exhaustive. One way to notice the difference is to try >>> with Andreas' definition, which the type-checker complains about: >>> >>> # type empty;; >>> # let extract : ('a, empty) result -> 'a = function Ok x -> x;; >>> Warning 8: this pattern-matching is not exhaustive. >>> Here is an example of a case that is not matched: >>> Error _ >>> val extract : ('a, empty) result -> 'a = <fun> >>> >>> On Fri, Nov 25, 2016 at 8:52 AM, Andreas Rossberg <rossberg@mpi-sws.org> wrote: >>>> >>>>> On Nov 25, 2016, at 14:46 , Gabriel Scherer <gabriel.scherer@gmail.com> wrote: >>>>> >>>>> I would agree that OCaml lacks a convenient way to define the empty >>>>> type. >>>> >>>> Isn’t >>>> >>>> type empty >>>> >>>> (as a definition) a sufficiently convenient way to define an empty type? >>>> >>>> /Andreas >>>> >>>>> (It used to be possible using the revised syntax, which uses >>>>> braces to delimit (non-polymorphic) variant definitions, but this was >>>>> ruled out by sanity checks introduced in OCaml 4.02). >>>>> >>>>> One way is to use GADTs to create an impossible type: >>>>> >>>>> type 'a onlybool = Bool : bool onlybool >>>>> type empty = int onlybool >>>>> >>>>> let extract : ('a, empty) result -> 'a = function Ok x -> x >>>>> >>>>> Since 4.03 (April 2016), it is possible to explicitly write a >>>>> so-called "refutation case", of the form "<pattern> -> .", to say that >>>>> a given case cannot happen -- it is an error if the type-checker >>>>> cannot verify it: >>>>> >>>>> https://caml.inria.fr/pub/docs/manual-ocaml/extn.html#sec241 >>>>> >>>>> let extract : ('a, empty) result -> 'a = function >>>>> | Ok x -> x >>>>> | Error _ -> . >>>>> >>>>> I would support the idea of having a built-in "empty" type to >>>>> represent a variant type with no constructor -- but then I am probably >>>>> biased in favor of the empty type. >>>>> >>>>> >>>>> On Fri, Nov 25, 2016 at 8:01 AM, Julien Blond <julien.blond@gmail.com> wrote: >>>>>> Yes, i knew the variant constructor but, somehow i didn't realize i was >>>>>> precisely using it for my mind was focused on the polymorphic variant list >>>>>> :) >>>>>> >>>>>> In fact, i wondered if a generic result type like this >>>>>> >>>>>> type ('a, 'b) result = Ok of 'a | Error of 'b >>>>>> >>>>>> that we can see in several library could be used to specify a "safe" result >>>>>> which could have type something like ('a, []) result. One could encode 'b as >>>>>> some error list at type level but it needs some complicated type management >>>>>> and i'm targeting OCaml beginners for which i just want them to be careful >>>>>> about non nominal results. >>>>>> >>>>>> >>>>>> 2016-11-25 12:22 GMT+01:00 David Allsopp <dra-news@metastack.com>: >>>>>>> >>>>>>> Julien Blond wrote: >>>>>>>> 2016-11-25 9:39 GMT+01:00 Julien Blond <mailto:julien.blond@gmail.com>: >>>>>>>> Hi, >>>>>>>> Let's try something : >>>>>>>> $ ocaml >>>>>>>> OCaml version 4.03.0 >>>>>>>> >>>>>>>> # let _ : [] list = [];; >>>>>>>> Characters 9-10: >>>>>>>> let _ : [] list = [];; >>>>>>>> Error: Syntax error >>>>>>>> # type empty = [];; >>>>>>>> type empty = [] >>>>>>>> # let _ : empty list = [];; >>>>>>>> - : empty list = [] >>>>>>>> # >>>>>>>> >>>>>>>> Does anyone know if there is a reason to forbid the empty polymorphic >>>>>>>> variant >>>>>>>> set in type expressions or if it's a bug ? >>>>>>> >>>>>>> As you've observed, [] is a variant constructor since 4.03.0 - see GPR#234 >>>>>>> (https://github.com/ocaml/ocaml/pull/234). The GPR contains references and >>>>>>> comments as to the motivation for this. >>>>>>> >>>>>>> What's your desired use for the type of the non-extensible empty >>>>>>> polymorphic variant? >>>>>>> >>>>>>> Possibly related, you can define a general type for a list of polymorphic >>>>>>> variants: >>>>>>> >>>>>>> let (empty : [> ] list) = [] >>>>>>> >>>>>>> or >>>>>>> >>>>>>> let (length : [> ] list -> int) = List.length;; >>>>>>> length [`Foo; `Bar];; >>>>>>> length [42];; >>>>>>> >>>>>>> if that's what you were after? >>>>>>> >>>>>>> >>>>>>> David >>>>>> >>>>>> >>>>> >>>>> -- >>>>> Caml-list mailing list. Subscription management and archives: >>>>> https://sympa.inria.fr/sympa/arc/caml-list >>>>> Beginner's list: http://groups.yahoo.com/group/ocaml_beginners >>>>> Bug reports: http://caml.inria.fr/bin/caml-bugs >>>> >>> >>> -- >>> Caml-list mailing list. Subscription management and archives: >>> https://sympa.inria.fr/sympa/arc/caml-list >>> Beginner's list: http://groups.yahoo.com/group/ocaml_beginners >>> Bug reports: http://caml.inria.fr/bin/caml-bugs >> >> -- >> Caml-list mailing list. Subscription management and archives: >> https://sympa.inria.fr/sympa/arc/caml-list >> Beginner's list: http://groups.yahoo.com/group/ocaml_beginners >> Bug reports: http://caml.inria.fr/bin/caml-bugs > > > > -- > Markus Mottl http://www.ocaml.info markus.mottl@gmail.com ^ permalink raw reply [flat|nested] 14+ messages in thread
* Re: [Caml-list] Empty polymorphic variant set 2016-11-25 13:52 ` Andreas Rossberg 2016-11-25 15:42 ` Markus Mottl 2016-11-25 15:46 ` Gabriel Scherer @ 2016-11-25 16:50 ` Stephen Dolan 2016-11-25 16:59 ` Jeremy Yallop 2 siblings, 1 reply; 14+ messages in thread From: Stephen Dolan @ 2016-11-25 16:50 UTC (permalink / raw) To: Andreas Rossberg Cc: Gabriel Scherer, Julien Blond, David Allsopp, OCaml mailing-list [-- Attachment #1: Type: text/plain, Size: 716 bytes --] On Fri, Nov 25, 2016 at 1:52 PM, Andreas Rossberg <rossberg@mpi-sws.org> wrote: > > > On Nov 25, 2016, at 14:46 , Gabriel Scherer <gabriel.scherer@gmail.com> > wrote: > > > > I would agree that OCaml lacks a convenient way to define the empty > > type. > > Isn’t > > type empty > > (as a definition) a sufficiently convenient way to define an empty type? > I agree that that defines the empty type, but OCaml disagrees. OCaml takes that as declaring an abstract type, just as if you'd included a module exposing an opaque type. So, the compiler won't conclude that 'empty' is actually an empty type (viewing it as an unknown abstract type), nor will it refute (int, empty) eq. Stephen [-- Attachment #2: Type: text/html, Size: 1164 bytes --] ^ permalink raw reply [flat|nested] 14+ messages in thread
* Re: [Caml-list] Empty polymorphic variant set 2016-11-25 16:50 ` Stephen Dolan @ 2016-11-25 16:59 ` Jeremy Yallop 0 siblings, 0 replies; 14+ messages in thread From: Jeremy Yallop @ 2016-11-25 16:59 UTC (permalink / raw) To: Stephen Dolan Cc: Andreas Rossberg, Gabriel Scherer, Julien Blond, David Allsopp, OCaml mailing-list On 25 November 2016 at 16:50, Stephen Dolan <stephen.dolan@cl.cam.ac.uk> wrote: > On Fri, Nov 25, 2016 at 1:52 PM, Andreas Rossberg <rossberg@mpi-sws.org> > wrote: >> >> >> > On Nov 25, 2016, at 14:46 , Gabriel Scherer <gabriel.scherer@gmail.com> >> > wrote: >> > >> > I would agree that OCaml lacks a convenient way to define the empty >> > type. >> >> Isn’t >> >> type empty >> >> (as a definition) a sufficiently convenient way to define an empty type? > > > I agree that that defines the empty type, but OCaml disagrees. OCaml takes > that as declaring an abstract type, just as if you'd included a module > exposing an opaque type. So, the compiler won't conclude that 'empty' is > actually an empty type (viewing it as an unknown abstract type), nor will it > refute (int, empty) eq. There's a small (and not enormously useful) distinction to be made here. If 'empty' is in the current module then OCaml knows that 'empty' and 'int' are incompatible, and so accepts the following program: type empty type (_,_) eql = Refl : ('a,'a) eql let f : (int, empty) eql -> unit = function _ -> . However, if 'empty' is defined in a different module ('M', say) then OCaml treats 'empty' and 'int' as compatible and so rejects the following (non-)program: type (_,_) eql = Refl : ('a,'a) eql let f : (int, M.empty) eql -> unit = function _ -> . Jeremy ^ permalink raw reply [flat|nested] 14+ messages in thread
end of thread, other threads:[~2016-11-25 17:12 UTC | newest] Thread overview: 14+ messages (download: mbox.gz / follow: Atom feed) -- links below jump to the message on this page -- 2016-11-25 8:39 [Caml-list] Empty polymorphic variant set Julien Blond 2016-11-25 9:19 ` Ben Millwood 2016-11-25 9:20 ` Julien Blond 2016-11-25 11:22 ` David Allsopp 2016-11-25 13:01 ` Julien Blond 2016-11-25 13:46 ` Gabriel Scherer 2016-11-25 13:52 ` Andreas Rossberg 2016-11-25 15:42 ` Markus Mottl 2016-11-25 15:46 ` Gabriel Scherer 2016-11-25 15:59 ` Yaron Minsky 2016-11-25 16:42 ` Markus Mottl 2016-11-25 17:11 ` Gabriel Scherer 2016-11-25 16:50 ` Stephen Dolan 2016-11-25 16:59 ` Jeremy Yallop
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