From: Jacques Garrigue <garrigue@math.nagoya-u.ac.jp>
To: Berke Durak <berke.durak@gmail.com>
Cc: OCaML List Mailing <caml-list@inria.fr>
Subject: Re: [Caml-list] Trying to define a functor combining polymorphic variants
Date: Sat, 3 May 2014 10:43:46 +0900 [thread overview]
Message-ID: <DD57D715-4E49-469D-A7F5-0F288F1A5C95@math.nagoya-u.ac.jp> (raw)
In-Reply-To: <CAALTfKAgRe8EnL60-PavnnbqHFfnRKABNUkqE0hWkE+Q-sGYuA@mail.gmail.com>
On 2014/05/03 00:50, Berke Durak wrote:
>
> Thanks Leo and Jacques for the responses.
>
> Jacques, if the PROD functor has to have a compatibility tag, doesn't
> it mean that you can't reuse it to generate large products? i.e. how
> would one write: A*B*C*D = PROD(A)(PROD(B)(PROD(C)(D))))?
The compatibility annotation is on the functor. If the variant types
in the modules you pass to the functor are concrete, they don’t need
annotations.
If you want to define a 4-ary functor that calls PROD, then its arguments
will need annotations too, of course.
For the details, you can see the internship report by Romain Bardou (in French):
Unions de variants polymorphes abstraits
http://www.math.nagoya-u.ac.jp/~garrigue/papers/index.html
Jacques Garrigue
> On Fri, May 2, 2014 at 2:14 AM, Jacques Garrigue
> <garrigue@math.nagoya-u.ac.jp> wrote:
>> On 2014/05/02 05:58, Berke Durak wrote:
>>> So I naturally wanted to write a functor that does what the module AB does:
>>>
>>> module type S = sig
>>> type message
>>> val string_of_message : message -> string
>>> end
>>>
>>> module PROD(A : S)(B : S) = struct
>>> type message = [ A.message | B.message ]
>>> let string_of_message = function
>>> | #A.t as msg -> A.string_of_message msg
>>> | #B.t as msg -> B.string_of_message msg
>>> end
>>>
>>> But we (me + people on #ocaml: mrvn, drup, ggole, whitequark...) couldn't find a
>>> way to specify, in the signature S, that message is a polymorphic variant so
>>> that [ A.message | B.message ] is legal.
>>
>> There is a branch of the compiler which allows you to do that.
>>
>> http://caml.inria.fr/cgi-bin/viewvc.cgi/ocaml/branches/varunion/
>>
>> Note that it contains only part of the directories. You can get the others
>> from a pristine 3.10.
>>
>> Using that version, you would write:
>> module type S = sig
>> type message = private [> ]
>> …
>> end
>>
>> module PROD (A : S) (B : S with type message = private [> ] ~ A.message) = …
>>
>> where the ~ is a compatibility annotation.
>>
>> This was never merged because I couldn’t find a clean way to fix some gap between
>> theory and practice, but I may give it another try.
>> Keigo Imai used it in his async_session code.
>>
>> https://github.com/keigoi/async_session/blob/master/varunion_session.ml
>>
>> Jacques Garrigue
prev parent reply other threads:[~2014-05-03 1:44 UTC|newest]
Thread overview: 5+ messages / expand[flat|nested] mbox.gz Atom feed top
2014-05-01 20:58 Berke Durak
2014-05-01 23:55 ` Leo White
2014-05-02 6:14 ` Jacques Garrigue
2014-05-02 15:50 ` Berke Durak
2014-05-03 1:43 ` Jacques Garrigue [this message]
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