* generalization in tuples
@ 2000-10-16 12:42 David Monniaux
2000-10-17 8:11 ` Didier Remy
0 siblings, 1 reply; 3+ messages in thread
From: David Monniaux @ 2000-10-16 12:42 UTC (permalink / raw)
To: Liste CAML
(En français: pourquoi ne pas généraliser le type d'un tuple pour cause de
non-généralisabilité d'une des parties du tuple si de toute façon les
variables de type à généraliser n'y interviennent pas?)
Some typing problem has been bothering me for the week-end.
Let us consider the following code:
# let extractor f = f ~foo:"aaa" ~bar:"bbb";;
val extractor : (foo:string -> bar:string -> 'a) -> 'a = <fun>
# let grostruc = List.map string_of_int [1; 2; 3];;
val grostruc : string list = ["1"; "2"; "3"]
# let zoinx = grostruc, extractor;;
val zoinx : string list * ((foo:string -> bar:string -> 'a) -> 'a) =
["1"; "2"; "3"], <fun>
Very logical, and what I wanted: a tuple with some big computed stuff in
the first member and a polymorphic function in the second (this is of
course a simplified example of the actual production code).
Now I do not want to pollute my namespace defining extractor and grostruc,
since all I'm interested in is zoinx.
# let bidule = let extractor f = f ~foo:"aaa" ~bar:"bbb" and grostruc =
List.map string_of_int [1; 2; 3] in grostruc,extractor;;
val bidule : string list * ((foo:string -> bar:string -> '_a) -> '_a) =
The function application in the definition of grostruc prevents 'a from
being generalized. This code is nevertheless equivalent to the precedent
one except from the namespace pollution.
So I actually have two questions:
1/ Is it possible to do what I want to do, even if it means using a
kludge? The above code, using multiple let's, is not good: it's not
useable in the middle of an expression (this is for CamlP4-generated
code).
(acceptable kludges include the use of Obj.magic)
2/ Is there a finer notion of a "generalizable" expression that
encompasses the above code, and could the "let generalization" procedure
in the compiler be improved so that the above code gets a polymorphic
type?
David Monniaux http://www.di.ens.fr/~monniaux
Laboratoire d'informatique de l'École Normale Supérieure,
Paris, France
^ permalink raw reply [flat|nested] 3+ messages in thread
* Re: generalization in tuples
2000-10-16 12:42 generalization in tuples David Monniaux
@ 2000-10-17 8:11 ` Didier Remy
2000-10-17 19:17 ` Didier Remy
0 siblings, 1 reply; 3+ messages in thread
From: Didier Remy @ 2000-10-17 8:11 UTC (permalink / raw)
To: David Monniaux; +Cc: Liste CAML
On Mon, Oct 16, 2000 at 02:42:11PM +0200, David Monniaux wrote:
> 1/ Is it possible to do what I want to do, even if it means using a
> kludge? The above code, using multiple let's, is not good: it's not
> useable in the middle of an expression (this is for CamlP4-generated
> code).
>
> (acceptable kludges include the use of Obj.magic)
In principle, Obj.magic should do the job, but it does not:
Obj.magic (fun x -> x)
is treated as an application and returns a weak type ;-(
The problem is that "Obj.magic" is defined as a primitive and the above is
typed as any other application, but I don't see any reason except technical
to treat Obj.magic as a constructor. Anyway, I don't think Obj.magic is
a good fix...
> 2/ Is there a finer notion of a "generalizable" expression that
> encompasses the above code, and could the "let generalization" procedure
> in the compiler be improved so that the above code gets a polymorphic
> type?
Yes, there is a very simple generalization of the value-only polymorphism
restriction.
Expressions need to be partitioned into two sets: expansive and
non-expansive expressions, such that the evaluation of non-expansive is
guaranteed not to create any storage.
For instance, non-expansive expressions may include variables, values (hence
functions), as well as constructors applied to non-expansive expressions.
Note that subexpressions of non-expansive expression are often expansive
(e.g. typically when the expression is under lambda-abstraction).
Given an expression e, we are only interested in outer expansive
sub-expressions of e, i.e. those that are not sub-expressions of a
non-expansive sub-expression of e (in which case, they are protected from
evaluation).
When typing an expression e, all type variables appearing in at least one
outer expansive sub-expression of e may also be the type of a store cell
allocation and should not be generalized. All other type variables can be
generalized.
For instance, in (a simpler version of) your example:
let x = (ref [], fun x -> x);;
The expression (ref [], fun x -> x) has type 'a ref * ('b -> 'b);
here, "ref []" is an application, hence an (outer) expansive expression and
'a appearing in its type cannot be generalized. Conversely, "fun x -> x" is
non-expansive and since variable "'b" only appear in the type of this
non-expansive subexpression, it can be generalized.
A few more examples:
---------------------
let x = (let y = fun x -> x in ref y, y)
: ('a -> 'a) ref * ('a -> 'a)
Here 'a appears both in an outer expansive expansive expression and in a
non-expansive expressions. Hence it is dangerous can cannot be generalized.
let x = fun x -> ref x
: ('a -> 'a ref)
The expression is protected, i.e. non-expansive and "'a" can be
generalized.
(Note that this is a strict generalization of the actual solution.()
The implementation
-------------------
This is actually quite simple: while typeckecking an expression, just keep
track of whether the expression is the outermost non-expansive part of a
let-bound expression, and if not, make its variable non-generalizable.
In fact, I experimented this in MLART a while ago:
#morgon:~/caml/camlart/src$ ./camlrun ./camltop -I lib
> Caml Light version 0.5 (modified with extensible records)
#(ref 1, fun x -> x);;
- : int ref * ('a -> 'a) = ref 1, <fun>
or, using extensible records :-)
#{!a = fun x -> x};;
> Toplevel input:
>{!a = fun x -> x};;
>^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^
> Cannot generalize 'a in {a : mut. 'a -> 'a; abs. 'b}
#{!a =1; b = fun x -> x};;
- : {a : mut. int; b : pre. 'a -> 'a; abs. 'b} = {!a = 1; b = <fun>}
#
-Didier
PS:
This has never been implemented in Ocaml, probably because, besides me,
you are one of first persons to complain about the drastic implementation of
value-only polymorphism restriction.
^ permalink raw reply [flat|nested] 3+ messages in thread
* Re: generalization in tuples
2000-10-17 8:11 ` Didier Remy
@ 2000-10-17 19:17 ` Didier Remy
0 siblings, 0 replies; 3+ messages in thread
From: Didier Remy @ 2000-10-17 19:17 UTC (permalink / raw)
To: David Monniaux; +Cc: Liste CAML
> let x = (let y = fun x -> x in ref y, y)
> : ('a -> 'a) ref * ('a -> 'a)
Indeed, as Michel Mauny pointed out to me, this expression would have type:
let x = (let y = fun x -> x in ref y, y)
: ('a -> 'a) ref * ('b -> 'b)
thus 'b appearing only in a non-expansive expression could be also
generalized here. (BTW, the context "let x = v in [ ]" is non-expansive
whenever v is)
I meant to create the situation where a type variable appears on both
side of a product, when one side is expansive, this other is not, and the
context of the product is non-expansive. But I can't think of a ``natural''
example of this. The usual trick:
let x = (fun (y : 'a) -> ref y, y) (fun x -> x)
: ('a -> 'a) ref * ('a -> 'a)
does not work, because the whole expression becomes an application and is
expansive. I can only think of using an artifial typing constraint:
let x = (let y = fun x -> x in ref (y : 'a), (y : 'a))
: ('a -> 'a) ref * ('a -> 'a)
> Here 'a appears both in an outer expansive expansive expression and in a
> non-expansive expressions. Hence it is dangerous can cannot be generalized.
Funny! it is so difficult to stop type generalization...
Didier
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