From: Damien Doligez <damien.doligez@inria.fr>
To: Caml-list List <caml-list@inria.fr>
Subject: Re: [Caml-list] typing problem with sexplib and mutually recursive polymorphic types
Date: Wed, 11 Mar 2009 17:16:36 +0100 [thread overview]
Message-ID: <D7B79848-190B-4FCC-885C-241AB2013066@inria.fr> (raw)
In-Reply-To: <f8560b80903110744v193bd3em905a47b59686eac0@mail.gmail.com>
On 2009-03-11, at 15:44, Markus Mottl wrote:
> That's true, but unlike Haskell OCaml doesn't have mandatory types.
> This means the user can't force the compiler to start out with
> user-provided type declarations. The OCaml compiler will always run
> type inference first and only try to unify the result with the
> user-provided type declaration, i.e. when it's too late.
That is not quite true any more. For example, I changed the
type-checker a few years ago to start with the user-provided type
when typing a let rec, in order to be able to debug my large
recursive definitions. Note that I didn't do that from scrach,
I used an infrastructure that was already present for seeding the
type inference in some cases. IIRC, it is there for some object-
oriented reason.
Next time you have a type error on the wrong recursive call, try
annotating the function at its definition point.
For example, compare the error messages for:
let rec f x = g x []
and g x l =
match l with
| [] -> f "a"
| [a] -> f 1
| [a; b] -> f 2
| _ -> f 3
;;
versus:
let rec f (x : int) = g x []
and g x l =
match l with
| [] -> f "a"
| [a] -> f 1
| [a; b] -> f 2
| _ -> f 3
;;
Note that your second sentence is still right, because type annotations
are only used in this way in a limited number of cases (let rec is one
example).
-- Damien
next prev parent reply other threads:[~2009-03-11 16:16 UTC|newest]
Thread overview: 11+ messages / expand[flat|nested] mbox.gz Atom feed top
2009-03-11 2:45 Yoann Padioleau
2009-03-11 4:25 ` [Caml-list] " Markus Mottl
2009-03-11 6:11 ` yoann padioleau
2009-03-11 14:20 ` Markus Mottl
2009-03-11 14:32 ` Yitzhak Mandelbaum
2009-03-11 14:44 ` Markus Mottl
2009-03-11 16:16 ` Damien Doligez [this message]
2009-03-11 16:43 ` Markus Mottl
2009-03-11 19:03 ` Till Varoquaux
2009-03-12 1:42 ` Jacques Garrigue
2009-03-11 23:08 ` Yoann Padioleau
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