* [Caml-list] mixin modules paper and future?
@ 2002-08-27 3:33 Chris Hecker
2002-08-28 8:43 ` Tom Hirschowitz
0 siblings, 1 reply; 25+ messages in thread
From: Chris Hecker @ 2002-08-27 3:33 UTC (permalink / raw)
To: caml-list
While looking around Xavier's site, I came across this new paper (at least,
new since last time I looked):
Mixin modules in a call-by-value setting, with Tom Hirschowitz.
Proceedings of ESOP 2002, LNCS 2305.
http://pauillac.inria.fr/~xleroy/publi/mixins-cbv-esop2002.pdf
The results in the paper look really exciting to my untrained eye, and I
had a few questions...
1. First, the annoying obvious question: Any wild guesses when this work
will find its way into caml? I read the whole paper, but had to skim the
lambda calc sections since my lambda-fu is not strong. It's clear there
are a number of open problems, so it's obviously not imminent in the next
release, but it sure is cool (the way it unifies functors and recursion is
great).
2. The paper has a few places where it mentions work that has to be done
at init time, which sounded like runtime at the point where the minix sum
was computed. Is this true? For the very simple case of "I want to
recurse between two compilation units like C++", is there still overhead
that must happen at runtime and that can't be done at compile time?
3. The following is from the paper:
>A drawback of dependency graphs is that programmers must (in principle)
>provide them explicitly when declaring a mixin signature, e.g. for a deferred
>sub-mixin component. This could make programs quite verbose.
I may have missed it, but I didn't see where this explicit graph thing came
in, since none of the examples had it. I assume you don't mean the type
declaration of the deferred values, right? Is there some other
specification that's necessary?
Thanks,
Chris
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* [Caml-list] mixin modules paper and future?
2002-08-27 3:33 [Caml-list] mixin modules paper and future? Chris Hecker
@ 2002-08-28 8:43 ` Tom Hirschowitz
2002-08-28 19:25 ` Chris Hecker
0 siblings, 1 reply; 25+ messages in thread
From: Tom Hirschowitz @ 2002-08-28 8:43 UTC (permalink / raw)
To: Chris Hecker; +Cc: caml-list
Hi Chris,
> While looking around Xavier's site, I came across this new paper (at least,
> new since last time I looked):
Last January yes.
> 1. First, the annoying obvious question: Any wild guesses when this work
> will find its way into caml?
> I read the whole paper, but had to skim the
> lambda calc sections since my lambda-fu is not strong. It's clear there
> are a number of open problems, so it's obviously not imminent in the next
> release, but it sure is cool (the way it unifies functors and recursion is
> great).
You're right, it is not at all planned for any future release. There
are too many open questions yet even to make any guess whether it will ever
find its way. But thanks for your interest!
> 2. The paper has a few places where it mentions work that has to be done
> at init time, which sounded like runtime at the point where the mixin sum
> was computed. Is this true?
Almost, it would rather be at the time when the mixin is instanciated
(ie "closed").
> For the very simple case of "I want to
> recurse between two compilation units like C++", is there still overhead
> that must happen at runtime and that can't be done at compile time?
In the present system yes, and it is a matter of design I believe.
For instance, even for your simple case, you have to first write unit
A, then unit B, and then create C = close(A + B), and that's in the
source language, so closing the recursion loop is really an operation
of the language.
But maybe you are asking for optimizations performing such tasks at
compile-time? We haven't thought too much about such optimizations
yet, and that's probably a good question. It is not a priority
though, since some design problems remain open, and the efficiency of
taking a mixin module instance is not supposed to be critical, in the
context of an extension of ML modules.
Please, tell me if I missed your point.
> 3. The following is from the paper:
>
> >A drawback of dependency graphs is that programmers must (in principle)
> >provide them explicitly when declaring a mixin signature, e.g. for a deferred
> >sub-mixin component. This could make programs quite verbose.
>
> I may have missed it, but I didn't see where this explicit graph thing came
> in, since none of the examples had it. I assume you don't mean the type
> declaration of the deferred values, right? Is there some other
> specification that's necessary?
Yes, we meant the type declaration of the deferred values. If a
deferred mixin is expected, its type must be provided by the
programmer. In the paper, we don't have considered type inference
issues, but it seems to be far from trivial, as described by papers
about objects and classes, which appear to have similar problems.
Bye,
Tom
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* Re: [Caml-list] mixin modules paper and future?
2002-08-28 8:43 ` Tom Hirschowitz
@ 2002-08-28 19:25 ` Chris Hecker
2002-08-29 10:11 ` M E Leypold @ labnet
0 siblings, 1 reply; 25+ messages in thread
From: Chris Hecker @ 2002-08-28 19:25 UTC (permalink / raw)
To: tom.hirschowitz; +Cc: caml-list
>You're right, it is not at all planned for any future release. There
>are too many open questions yet even to make any guess whether it will ever
>find its way. But thanks for your interest!
Hopefully you guys are actively working on solving the open
problems. :) I think that this is an incredibly important feature for
caml to make headway into large systems development.
>But maybe you are asking for optimizations performing such tasks at
>compile-time?
Yeah, at least for the easy cases. My thought is that people will start
using it to decouple large modules into different files, and it would be
nice if that simple case (basically, mirroring using a header to split a
big interdependent system across multiple C files) incurred no runtime
overhead. However, it's much more important to solve the open research
problems than it is to optimize it, so ignore this for now. :)
> Yes, we meant the type declaration of the deferred values. If a
>deferred mixin is expected, its type must be provided by the
>programmer.
Ah, okay. I guess it doesn't seem unreasonable to me to force the
programmer to specify types for the deferred values, but maybe I haven't
gotten used to type inference enough to be annoyed by this yet. One thing
is for certain: it would be MUCH better to implement this feature
requiring type declarations than to sit on it until you figure out how to
do inference on deferred values. Caml programmers are used to specifying
types in mli files anyway, so it's just not a big deal. Unless I'm missing
something important.
Keep up the good work!
Chris
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* Re: [Caml-list] mixin modules paper and future?
2002-08-28 19:25 ` Chris Hecker
@ 2002-08-29 10:11 ` M E Leypold @ labnet
2002-08-29 18:47 ` [Caml-list] objective caml and industry james woodyatt
2002-08-30 2:21 ` [Caml-list] mixin modules paper and future? Chris Hecker
0 siblings, 2 replies; 25+ messages in thread
From: M E Leypold @ labnet @ 2002-08-29 10:11 UTC (permalink / raw)
To: Chris Hecker; +Cc: tom.hirschowitz, caml-list
Chris Hecker writes:
>
> >You're right, it is not at all planned for any future release. There
> >are too many open questions yet even to make any guess whether it will ever
> >find its way. But thanks for your interest!
>
> Hopefully you guys are actively working on solving the open
> problems. :) I think that this is an incredibly important feature for
> caml to make headway into large systems development.
Do you think so? I think 1 thing we can learn from Java, C, C++,
FORTRAN and COBOL is, that the only thing a language doesn't need to
"make headway into large systems development" is any smart mechanisms
for composing systems. That is to say: Success doesn't depend on
merit.
Regards -- Markus
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* [Caml-list] objective caml and industry
2002-08-29 10:11 ` M E Leypold @ labnet
@ 2002-08-29 18:47 ` james woodyatt
2002-08-29 22:57 ` Michael Vanier
` (2 more replies)
2002-08-30 2:21 ` [Caml-list] mixin modules paper and future? Chris Hecker
1 sibling, 3 replies; 25+ messages in thread
From: james woodyatt @ 2002-08-29 18:47 UTC (permalink / raw)
To: The Trade
On Thursday, Aug 29, 2002, at 03:11 US/Pacific, M E Leypold @ labnet
wrote:
>
> Do you think so? I think 1 thing we can learn from Java, C, C++,
> FORTRAN and COBOL is, that the only thing a language doesn't need to
> "make headway into large systems development" is any smart mechanisms
> for composing systems. That is to say: Success doesn't depend on
> merit.
I promise not to be broken record about this, but there are some things
holding Objective Caml back from being an optimal language choice for
large industrial applications development. I don't think any of the
open problems in the research of mixin modules are on the list.
Here are the main issues holding back industrial developers from
adopting Objective Caml, I think:
+ Hysteresis. An awful lot of dollars have gone into the engineering
of cubicle farms full of programmers who know Java, C++ and other iron
age relics. These are dollars invested in training, development tools,
documentation, the works. Using Objective Caml in university computer
science courses can be inductive, but it's a long-term problem going
forward.
+ Type inference is scary. All the languages popular in industry today
that have syntactical support for polymorphism are either not strongly
typed or they require types to be explicitly defined prior to their
use. Industrial programmers will want to see the case made that type
inference is a language feature worth the pain associated with learning
how to work with it. I think a good case can be made; I just haven't
seen it. And I'm in industry, so if it's kicking around in academia
somewhere, it needs a wider audience.
+ Deployment issues. Industry likes to be able to treat every line of
source code it writes as if it were a trade secret, even when there's
no good reason to do so. It's like we're all queer for secrecy, or
something. The languages most popular with industry today permit
relatively easy distribution of dynamically loadable modules either in
native machine code or in an already widely adopted virtual machine
code. Objective Caml doesn't meet this criteria.
+ Stupidity. Objective Caml's popularity in academia is a curse as
well as a blessing. For every coder like me who wonders if he should
rather have gone into academia, industry has a hundred coders who think
career academics are a fat lot of pencil-necked geeks who can't get
"real" programming jobs. This is why industry continues to be
populated with idiots who think the reason Java programs so often
perform badly is the garbage collector. These are also the same people
who will tell you that the syntax of Objective Caml is intolerably
bizarre, while simultaneously raving about the elegance of C#. (I'm
not bitter. I'm not bitter.)
I started writing these in descending order of importance, but by the
time I got to the last one I began to think maybe I got it exactly
backward. All of these views are my own alone.
Maybe the two in the middle are the ones I would recommend the Caml
team think about in their copious spare time.
--
j h woodyatt <jhw@wetware.com>
markets are only free to the people who own them.
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* Re: [Caml-list] objective caml and industry
2002-08-29 18:47 ` [Caml-list] objective caml and industry james woodyatt
@ 2002-08-29 22:57 ` Michael Vanier
2002-08-29 23:52 ` james woodyatt
2002-08-30 13:13 ` Vitaly Lugovsky
2002-08-30 2:25 ` Chris Hecker
2002-08-31 2:26 ` John Max Skaller
2 siblings, 2 replies; 25+ messages in thread
From: Michael Vanier @ 2002-08-29 22:57 UTC (permalink / raw)
To: jhw; +Cc: caml-list
> Date: Thu, 29 Aug 2002 11:47:55 -0700
> From: james woodyatt <jhw@wetware.com>
>
> I promise not to be broken record about this, but there are some things
> holding Objective Caml back from being an optimal language choice for
> large industrial applications development. I don't think any of the
> open problems in the research of mixin modules are on the list.
>
[good reasons omitted]
> + Stupidity. Objective Caml's popularity in academia is a curse as
> well as a blessing. For every coder like me who wonders if he should
> rather have gone into academia, industry has a hundred coders who think
> career academics are a fat lot of pencil-necked geeks who can't get
> "real" programming jobs. This is why industry continues to be
> populated with idiots who think the reason Java programs so often
> perform badly is the garbage collector. These are also the same people
> who will tell you that the syntax of Objective Caml is intolerably
> bizarre, while simultaneously raving about the elegance of C#. (I'm
> not bitter. I'm not bitter.)
>
Now you're getting close to the real reason. You could cast this in a less
negative light by noting that ocaml has a long learning curve, even for
programmers who know lots of other languages. There are simply a lot of
unfamiliar features in ocaml for the vast majority of programmers.
However, I don't think you're being negative enough ;-) In my experience,
most programmers react to anything resembling functional programming as if
it were made out of kryptonite. The reason for this is that it forces them
to think in a different way than they're used to, and the resistance this
generates, even among otherwise very proficient coders, is nothing short of
astounding. Consider that object-oriented programming has been around
since around 1967 (simula) and yet it took more than twenty years to become
mainstream. And OO is a *much* less radical departure from ordinary
imperative programming than functional programming is. FP has been around
since 1960 (lisp) and is *still* considered to be radical! You can't
overestimate how conservative the community of programmers is. We teach
scheme as an introductory programming language at Caltech, and we get a
*lot* of resistance even from supposedly open-minded freshmen (most of whom
know C and thus think they know the "right" way to program). Also, the
average programmer, if he's even heard of functional programming (>99% of
them haven't) is convinced that it's incredibly inefficient and therefore
not worth learning.
Change takes time. I think chasing after industry acceptance of ocaml is
the wrong strategy. The right strategy is a grass-roots effort (building
up the language libraries, trying to attract the best hackers and using
ocaml in university courses). This approach has worked well for python,
and I think it will work well for ocaml as well.
Mike
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^ permalink raw reply [flat|nested] 25+ messages in thread
* Re: [Caml-list] objective caml and industry
2002-08-29 22:57 ` Michael Vanier
@ 2002-08-29 23:52 ` james woodyatt
2002-08-30 13:13 ` Vitaly Lugovsky
1 sibling, 0 replies; 25+ messages in thread
From: james woodyatt @ 2002-08-29 23:52 UTC (permalink / raw)
To: Michael Vanier; +Cc: caml-list
On Thursday, Aug 29, 2002, at 15:57 US/Pacific, Michael Vanier wrote:
>
> [...] We teach scheme as an introductory programming language at
> Caltech, and we get a *lot* of resistance even from supposedly
> open-minded freshmen [...]
Tell them that computer *scientists* need to learn functional
programming, and that if they really want to take courses in the
software equivalent of automotive repair, then perhaps they should have
considered studying at DeVry.
How's *that* for negative?
--
j h woodyatt <jhw@wetware.com>
markets are only free to the people who own them.
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* Re: [Caml-list] mixin modules paper and future?
2002-08-29 10:11 ` M E Leypold @ labnet
2002-08-29 18:47 ` [Caml-list] objective caml and industry james woodyatt
@ 2002-08-30 2:21 ` Chris Hecker
1 sibling, 0 replies; 25+ messages in thread
From: Chris Hecker @ 2002-08-30 2:21 UTC (permalink / raw)
To: M E Leypold @ labnet; +Cc: tom.hirschowitz, caml-list
> > I think that this is an incredibly important feature for
> > caml to make headway into large systems development.
>Do you think so?
You misunderstood what I thought was important, or I was unclear, or
both. ;) I think shipping the mixin system (or any system that allows
module recursion) is important, not the open problems themselves. All of
the examples you mentioned (well, I don't know about Cobol, but all the
others) allow you to have recursive systems spread across multiple files to
reduce compile times, limit file length, and break things out conceptually.
The concept of a "forward declaration" is critical to writing large scale
software effectively, I think.
Chris
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* Re: [Caml-list] objective caml and industry
2002-08-29 18:47 ` [Caml-list] objective caml and industry james woodyatt
2002-08-29 22:57 ` Michael Vanier
@ 2002-08-30 2:25 ` Chris Hecker
2002-08-30 18:14 ` Jonathan Coupe
2002-08-30 18:14 ` [Caml-list] objective caml and industry Jonathan Coupe
2002-08-31 2:26 ` John Max Skaller
2 siblings, 2 replies; 25+ messages in thread
From: Chris Hecker @ 2002-08-30 2:25 UTC (permalink / raw)
To: james woodyatt, The Trade
>+ Hysteresis.
>+ Type inference is scary.
>+ Deployment issues.
>+ Stupidity.
None of these are things the dev team needs to be working on...not that
they're not important, but the community, if it got its act together, could
solve all of these problems, or rather they could make as much headway on
them as the dev team. By contrast, the community cannot add massively
subtle and complicated features to the compiler; only the dev team can do that.
Chris
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* Re: [Caml-list] objective caml and industry
2002-08-29 22:57 ` Michael Vanier
2002-08-29 23:52 ` james woodyatt
@ 2002-08-30 13:13 ` Vitaly Lugovsky
2002-08-30 23:23 ` Michael Vanier
1 sibling, 1 reply; 25+ messages in thread
From: Vitaly Lugovsky @ 2002-08-30 13:13 UTC (permalink / raw)
To: Michael Vanier; +Cc: jhw, caml-list
On Thu, 29 Aug 2002, Michael Vanier wrote:
> Change takes time. I think chasing after industry acceptance of ocaml is
> the wrong strategy.
It already accepted functional programming. Look at what Microsoft
Research have done - isn't them represent the industry?
> This approach has worked well for python,
> and I think it will work well for ocaml as well.
Python is treated by industry as a "new, better Smalltalk".
There is no such a way for functional programming - Lisp always was
a marginal approach.
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* Re: [Caml-list] objective caml and industry
2002-08-30 2:25 ` Chris Hecker
@ 2002-08-30 18:14 ` Jonathan Coupe
2002-09-01 9:18 ` What kind of industry do you mean? (Was: [Caml-list] objective caml and industry) Mattias Waldau
2002-08-30 18:14 ` [Caml-list] objective caml and industry Jonathan Coupe
1 sibling, 1 reply; 25+ messages in thread
From: Jonathan Coupe @ 2002-08-30 18:14 UTC (permalink / raw)
To: caml-list
www.jetcafe.org/~npc/doc/euc00-sendmail.html
Interested parties might want to look at this article, written by a
(non-Ericson) team that decided to use Erlang for an industrial project.
Reading a software marketing book like "Inside The Tornado" might be
interesting too.
- Jonathan Coupe
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^ permalink raw reply [flat|nested] 25+ messages in thread
* Re: [Caml-list] objective caml and industry
2002-08-30 2:25 ` Chris Hecker
2002-08-30 18:14 ` Jonathan Coupe
@ 2002-08-30 18:14 ` Jonathan Coupe
1 sibling, 0 replies; 25+ messages in thread
From: Jonathan Coupe @ 2002-08-30 18:14 UTC (permalink / raw)
To: caml-list
www.jetcafe.org/~npc/doc/euc00-sendmail.html
Interested parties might want to look at this article, written by a
(non-Ericson) team that decided to use Erlang for an industrial project.
Reading a software marketing book like "Inside The Tornado" might be
interesting too.
- Jonathan Coupe
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^ permalink raw reply [flat|nested] 25+ messages in thread
* Re: [Caml-list] objective caml and industry
2002-08-30 13:13 ` Vitaly Lugovsky
@ 2002-08-30 23:23 ` Michael Vanier
0 siblings, 0 replies; 25+ messages in thread
From: Michael Vanier @ 2002-08-30 23:23 UTC (permalink / raw)
To: vsl; +Cc: jhw, caml-list
> Date: Fri, 30 Aug 2002 17:13:43 +0400 (MSD)
> From: Vitaly Lugovsky <vsl@ontil.ihep.su>
>
> On Thu, 29 Aug 2002, Michael Vanier wrote:
>
> > Change takes time. I think chasing after industry acceptance of ocaml is
> > the wrong strategy.
>
> It already accepted functional programming. Look at what Microsoft
> Research have done - isn't them represent the industry?
Microsoft has a research interest in functional programming. Though that's
perhaps encouraging, it's a far cry from trying to promote FP as something
programmers should learn. C# (which they do promote as something
programmers should learn) is a long, long way from FP. Still, every little
bit helps.
Mike
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^ permalink raw reply [flat|nested] 25+ messages in thread
* Re: [Caml-list] objective caml and industry
2002-08-29 18:47 ` [Caml-list] objective caml and industry james woodyatt
2002-08-29 22:57 ` Michael Vanier
2002-08-30 2:25 ` Chris Hecker
@ 2002-08-31 2:26 ` John Max Skaller
2002-09-02 18:38 ` Oleg
2 siblings, 1 reply; 25+ messages in thread
From: John Max Skaller @ 2002-08-31 2:26 UTC (permalink / raw)
To: james woodyatt; +Cc: The Trade
james woodyatt wrote:
> I promise not to be broken record about this, but there are some things
> holding Objective Caml back from being an optimal language choice for
> large industrial applications development.
> + Hysteresis.
Heh. Also known as 'inertia'. In my opinion, this is
THE MAJOR problem. It isn't a technical problem.
The coming English translation of the new O'Reilly Ocaml
book is the most significant step forward here since
Bagley's Shootout showed Ocaml is the top performing
language after C.
> + Type inference is scary.
Yes it is. Felix deliberately refuses to do it.
But it does do type deduction (bottom up).
> Industrial programmers will want to see the case made that type
> inference is a language feature worth the pain associated with learning
> how to work with it. I think a good case can be made; I just haven't
> seen it.
Yes you have, you just haven't recognized that INDUSTRY
itself has already made the case!
Most scripting languages, such as Python, support
polymorphism, and do not have type declarations.
QED. Case proven. People hate writing useless
type declarations.
Ocaml is even better, because it ALSO supports static
type checking.
No, it is NOT inference that is scary. It is the horrid
error messages.
That is a deep technical problem, which the Ocaml
team is successfully addressing. The most obviously
unhelpful messages have been improved
just going from 3.04 to 3.05/6. Much more work
is needed here, for example, to locate the places
where the engine gets its data, so that it can say
"here, x is infered to be type T, but here, it is
used as type T'"
whereas at present, the first location isn't known
to the engine, and so it often reports an
error in the "wrong" location.
But don't be too depressed: if you've seen a few
C++ template error messages, we'll, they aren't
so easy to figure out either :-)
> + Deployment issues. Industry likes to be able to treat every line of
> source code it writes as if it were a trade secret, even when there's no
> good reason to do so. It's like we're all queer for secrecy, or
> something. The languages most popular with industry today permit
> relatively easy distribution of dynamically loadable modules either in
> native machine code or in an already widely adopted virtual machine
> code. Objective Caml doesn't meet this criteria.
There are many other reasons for shared libraries.
Even now, I really NEED them in my Felix compiler.
My prior Ocaml project, Vyper, required them too.
In both cases these are technical demands, not a matter
of commercial requirements.
The context is different (Vyper had to emulate
Python's dynamic loading, Felix needs to be able
to compile and then execute code within the
compiler). Many other systems are continuously
running and require the ability to be upgraded
in pieces without stopping the process.
Dynamic loading simply isn't negotiable these days.
A translator that can't do it is useless in a very
large class of commercial applications.
> + Stupidity. Objective Caml's popularity in academia is a curse as well
> as a blessing. For every coder like me who wonders if he should rather
> have gone into academia, industry has a hundred coders who think career
> academics are a fat lot of pencil-necked geeks who can't get "real"
> programming jobs.
Of course they are (ducks for cover :-)
> This is why industry continues to be populated with
> idiots
now who is being prejudiced?
>who think the reason Java programs so often perform badly is the
> garbage collector. These are also the same people who will tell you
> that the syntax of Objective Caml is intolerably bizarre,
It is, believe me, it is. So is C++ syntax :-)
---
My data: I used Ocaml in a heavy commerical environment,
(the job was to produce a programming language).
The major concern was #1: lack of programmers.
The other concern was the licence.
The job was killed, not because of Ocaml,
but because in an engineering shop few had any idea
of the requirements for a research project,
or the issues involved in designing a programming language.
--
John Max Skaller, mailto:skaller@ozemail.com.au
snail:10/1 Toxteth Rd, Glebe, NSW 2037, Australia.
voice:61-2-9660-0850
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^ permalink raw reply [flat|nested] 25+ messages in thread
* What kind of industry do you mean? (Was: [Caml-list] objective caml and industry)
2002-08-30 18:14 ` Jonathan Coupe
@ 2002-09-01 9:18 ` Mattias Waldau
2002-09-01 20:15 ` Markus Mottl
` (2 more replies)
0 siblings, 3 replies; 25+ messages in thread
From: Mattias Waldau @ 2002-09-01 9:18 UTC (permalink / raw)
To: caml-list
Do you mean by industry that you are going to
make commercial software using O'Caml?
As I see it there are several typical categories
of commercial programs:
1. programs for internal use within an
organization (price = production cost)
2. server software (typical price > $15000)
3. client software (typical price $10 to $1000)
and there are essentially two OS out there:
a. Windows (hopefully we can soon ignore Windows 9x)
b. *nix
And unless you have a lot of VC-capital, the only
combination where you can make money within a year
or so is "client software" on "windows".
Reason:
1. Organizations buy server-software from established vendors
2. there are too few *nix out there
However, most of people on this list use *nix and create
extra libraries for O'Caml on *nix. Most of these are
useless for making commercial sellable software, since
if you produce commercial software, you have to focus on
what makes the software good and sellable, not learning
how to compile PCRE on windows (Sorry Markus, just an example :-).
So if you want O'Caml to be used by commercial developers
creating commercial software, make sure that your libraries
work on windows. (And use the LGPL or even better the BSD-license,
if I improve a BSD-license library, I will of course try to
merge it with the general available version, so that I don't
have to maintain it.)
Due to the above reasons I only use core Ocaml and pure
Ocaml-libraries. I develop under Linux, in order to be able
to debug, and create release on Windows.
/mattias
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^ permalink raw reply [flat|nested] 25+ messages in thread
* Re: What kind of industry do you mean? (Was: [Caml-list] objective caml and industry)
2002-09-01 9:18 ` What kind of industry do you mean? (Was: [Caml-list] objective caml and industry) Mattias Waldau
@ 2002-09-01 20:15 ` Markus Mottl
2002-09-01 21:10 ` [Caml-list] wxOCaml? Dave Mason
2002-09-02 6:23 ` [Caml-list] Re: What kind of industry do you mean? (Was: objective caml and industry) Michaël Grünewald
2002-09-02 12:43 ` What kind of industry do you mean? (Was: [Caml-list] " Alessandro Baretta
2002-09-02 18:15 ` What kind of industry do you mean? (Was: [Caml-list] objective caml and industry) Oleg
2 siblings, 2 replies; 25+ messages in thread
From: Markus Mottl @ 2002-09-01 20:15 UTC (permalink / raw)
To: Mattias Waldau; +Cc: caml-list
On Sun, 01 Sep 2002, Mattias Waldau wrote:
> However, most of people on this list use *nix and create extra libraries
> for O'Caml on *nix. Most of these are useless for making commercial
> sellable software, since if you produce commercial software, you have
> to focus on what makes the software good and sellable, not learning
> how to compile PCRE on windows (Sorry Markus, just an example :-).
No need to feel sorry! I work in a place privileged enough that I can
let Windows rot in benign neglect... ;-)
In any case, the main issue of making PCRE work on Windows is the
C-library, for which you need a C-compiler and linker. The OCaml-part
should work out-of-the-box. It's therefore not so much a problem caused
by INRIA but by Microsoft not shipping standard development tools with
their operating systems.
> So if you want O'Caml to be used by commercial developers creating
> commercial software, make sure that your libraries work on windows.
Well, even with those difficulties put in our way by Microsoft, people
obviously manage to get around them.
> Due to the above reasons I only use core Ocaml and pure
> Ocaml-libraries. I develop under Linux, in order to be able to debug,
> and create release on Windows.
Unfortunately, not everbody has as much choice as we have...
Regards,
Markus Mottl
--
Markus Mottl markus@oefai.at
Austrian Research Institute
for Artificial Intelligence http://www.oefai.at/~markus
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^ permalink raw reply [flat|nested] 25+ messages in thread
* [Caml-list] wxOCaml?
2002-09-01 20:15 ` Markus Mottl
@ 2002-09-01 21:10 ` Dave Mason
2002-09-02 6:23 ` [Caml-list] Re: What kind of industry do you mean? (Was: objective caml and industry) Michaël Grünewald
1 sibling, 0 replies; 25+ messages in thread
From: Dave Mason @ 2002-09-01 21:10 UTC (permalink / raw)
To: caml-list
There are a few messages in the mailing list talking about wxWindows
integration with OCaml, but I see no announcement of its availability.
I presume that means that nobody got to the point of making it work.
I'd really like to have a portable native-style windowing API, and
wxWindows looks like the best bet, so I'm planning on working on this.
Anybody with interest in helping?
Thanks ../Dave
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^ permalink raw reply [flat|nested] 25+ messages in thread
* [Caml-list] Re: What kind of industry do you mean? (Was: objective caml and industry)
2002-09-01 20:15 ` Markus Mottl
2002-09-01 21:10 ` [Caml-list] wxOCaml? Dave Mason
@ 2002-09-02 6:23 ` Michaël Grünewald
1 sibling, 0 replies; 25+ messages in thread
From: Michaël Grünewald @ 2002-09-02 6:23 UTC (permalink / raw)
To: caml-list
Markus Mottl <markus@oefai.at> writes:
> On Sun, 01 Sep 2002, Mattias Waldau wrote:
> > However, most of people on this list use *nix and create extra libraries
> > for O'Caml on *nix. Most of these are useless for making commercial
> > sellable software, since if you produce commercial software, you have
> > to focus on what makes the software good and sellable, not learning
> > how to compile PCRE on windows (Sorry Markus, just an example :-).
>
> No need to feel sorry! I work in a place privileged enough that I can
> let Windows rot in benign neglect... ;-)
>
> In any case, the main issue of making PCRE work on Windows is the
> C-library, for which you need a C-compiler and linker. The OCaml-part
> should work out-of-the-box. It's therefore not so much a problem caused
> by INRIA but by Microsoft not shipping standard development tools with
> their operating systems.
Maybe is it good advice to look after Cygwin ?
> > So if you want O'Caml to be used by commercial developers creating
> > commercial software, make sure that your libraries work on windows.
>
> Well, even with those difficulties put in our way by Microsoft, people
> obviously manage to get around them.
>
> > Due to the above reasons I only use core Ocaml and pure
> > Ocaml-libraries. I develop under Linux, in order to be able to debug,
> > and create release on Windows.
>
> Unfortunately, not everbody has as much choice as we have...
--
Michaël Grünewald <michael-grunewald@wanadoo.fr> - RSA PGP Key ID: 0x20D90C12
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^ permalink raw reply [flat|nested] 25+ messages in thread
* Re: What kind of industry do you mean? (Was: [Caml-list] objective caml and industry)
2002-09-01 9:18 ` What kind of industry do you mean? (Was: [Caml-list] objective caml and industry) Mattias Waldau
2002-09-01 20:15 ` Markus Mottl
@ 2002-09-02 12:43 ` Alessandro Baretta
2002-09-02 22:58 ` Gerd Stolpmann
2002-09-02 18:15 ` What kind of industry do you mean? (Was: [Caml-list] objective caml and industry) Oleg
2 siblings, 1 reply; 25+ messages in thread
From: Alessandro Baretta @ 2002-09-02 12:43 UTC (permalink / raw)
To: ocaml
Mattias Waldau wrote:
> Do you mean by industry that you are going to
> make commercial software using O'Caml?
>
> As I see it there are several typical categories
> of commercial programs:
>
> 1. programs for internal use within an
> organization (price = production cost)
> 2. server software (typical price > $15000)
> 3. client software (typical price $10 to $1000)
>
> and there are essentially two OS out there:
> a. Windows (hopefully we can soon ignore Windows 9x)
> b. *nix
>
> And unless you have a lot of VC-capital, the only
> combination where you can make money within a year
> or so is "client software" on "windows".
I don't agree. My customers pay me to develop server
software on *nix, where the clients just happen to be Linux
boxes but might just as well be windows boxes, for all I
care. And I'm paid pretty well actually.
I am not using only O'Caml. As I am developing a data
centric application, I use SQL and XML tools extensively.
Presently, PXP is a very strong XML parser, but it lacks
support for XSLT (XSchema would be nice, too), so I am
forced to go with Xalan of the Apache foundation.
The bottom line is: 1) you don't need to develop Windows
software to make money, and 2) you'd better focus on writing
high quality code with high quality software development tools.
BTW, I'd gladly give up XSLT and SQL if, respectively, we
had a pseudo-official XML transformation API for Ocaml, and
there were Caml server-side bindings with PostgreSQL. In the
first place, I'd be able to statically typecheck my XML
transformation code. In the second place, I'd be able to
write type safe queries in such complex contexts where
baseline SQL is insufficent and the generality of pl/pgSQL
is needed.
Alex
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^ permalink raw reply [flat|nested] 25+ messages in thread
* Re: What kind of industry do you mean? (Was: [Caml-list] objective caml and industry)
2002-09-01 9:18 ` What kind of industry do you mean? (Was: [Caml-list] objective caml and industry) Mattias Waldau
2002-09-01 20:15 ` Markus Mottl
2002-09-02 12:43 ` What kind of industry do you mean? (Was: [Caml-list] " Alessandro Baretta
@ 2002-09-02 18:15 ` Oleg
2 siblings, 0 replies; 25+ messages in thread
From: Oleg @ 2002-09-02 18:15 UTC (permalink / raw)
To: Mattias Waldau, caml-list
On Sunday 01 September 2002 05:18 am, Mattias Waldau wrote:
> Due to the above reasons I only use core Ocaml and pure
> Ocaml-libraries. I develop under Linux, in order to be able
> to debug, and create release on Windows.
Client software in O'Caml? What type? Are you planning to or selling it
already?
Cheers
Oleg
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^ permalink raw reply [flat|nested] 25+ messages in thread
* Re: [Caml-list] objective caml and industry
2002-08-31 2:26 ` John Max Skaller
@ 2002-09-02 18:38 ` Oleg
0 siblings, 0 replies; 25+ messages in thread
From: Oleg @ 2002-09-02 18:38 UTC (permalink / raw)
To: John Max Skaller; +Cc: The Trade
On Friday 30 August 2002 10:26 pm, John Max Skaller wrote:
> The coming English translation of the new O'Reilly Ocaml
> book is the most significant step forward here since
> Bagley's Shootout showed Ocaml is the top performing
> language after C.
While Bagley's Shootout was good PR because of its Slashdot exposure, as I
mentioned recently [1], Bagley confuses doubly-linked lists and deques, and
then goes on to benchmark C++ doubly-linked list against O'Caml pre-allocated
array. I don't want to say anything about scientific integrity, since I think
INRIA simply overlooked the poor quality and extreme lopsidedness of the
Shootout (They reference it on O'Caml's front page)
Regards,
Oleg
[1] http://caml.inria.fr/archives/200208/msg00332.html
The Shootout page I referenced changed a bit since Aug 19, 2002, but, still,
it was the misleading results that were publicized.
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^ permalink raw reply [flat|nested] 25+ messages in thread
* Re: What kind of industry do you mean? (Was: [Caml-list] objective caml and industry)
2002-09-02 12:43 ` What kind of industry do you mean? (Was: [Caml-list] " Alessandro Baretta
@ 2002-09-02 22:58 ` Gerd Stolpmann
2002-09-03 6:58 ` [Caml-list] Re: An XML standard API? (was:What kind of industry do you mean?) Alessandro Baretta
0 siblings, 1 reply; 25+ messages in thread
From: Gerd Stolpmann @ 2002-09-02 22:58 UTC (permalink / raw)
To: Alessandro Baretta; +Cc: ocaml
Am 2002.09.02 14:43 schrieb(en) Alessandro Baretta:
> BTW, I'd gladly give up XSLT and SQL if, respectively, we
> had a pseudo-official XML transformation API for Ocaml, and
What do you mean with "pseudo-official"?
A remark as developer of free software: One of the advantages
is that I can do what I want, nobody forces me to develop in a
certain way, or direction. Free software is basically software
without standards. Industry needs standards to make their
products interchangeable, but this is not a key point for free
software, because you have the sources, and you have some
control over them. PostgreSQL is the best example for this;
originally it did not support SQL, but had some unique features
other DBMS did not have. As a user you get the benefits of the
freedom of the developers, but at the price of lacking secondary
virtues such as standard-conformance.
Why don't we have a generally accepted XML transformation API?
It would not be very much work to develop such an API, and to
do a prototype for an implementation. I suppose that auch an
API is not really needed, at least now.
> there were Caml server-side bindings with PostgreSQL. In the
> first place, I'd be able to statically typecheck my XML
> transformation code. In the second place, I'd be able to
> write type safe queries in such complex contexts where
> baseline SQL is insufficent and the generality of pl/pgSQL
> is needed.
Gerd
------------------------------------------------------------
Gerd Stolpmann * Viktoriastr. 45 * 64293 Darmstadt * Germany
gerd@gerd-stolpmann.de http://www.gerd-stolpmann.de
------------------------------------------------------------
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^ permalink raw reply [flat|nested] 25+ messages in thread
* [Caml-list] Re: An XML standard API? (was:What kind of industry do you mean?)
2002-09-02 22:58 ` Gerd Stolpmann
@ 2002-09-03 6:58 ` Alessandro Baretta
0 siblings, 0 replies; 25+ messages in thread
From: Alessandro Baretta @ 2002-09-03 6:58 UTC (permalink / raw)
To: Ocaml
Gerd Stolpmann wrote:
> Am 2002.09.02 14:43 schrieb(en) Alessandro Baretta:
>
>>BTW, I'd gladly give up XSLT and SQL if, respectively, we
>>had a pseudo-official XML transformation API for Ocaml, and
>
>
> What do you mean with "pseudo-official"?
PXP is at least "pseudo-official", IMHO. It does not take an
international consortium such as the W3C or the ISO to make
a free software API "standard, for all practical purposes".
Just consider SAX. It is basically just as "standard" as the
DOM, which is not a standard anyway.
> A remark as developer of free software: One of the advantages
> is that I can do what I want, nobody forces me to develop in a
> certain way, or direction. Free software is basically software
> without standards.
This I disagree with. Standards are useful in the free
software community, possibly even more than in the
commercial software industry. The whole idea behind free
software is the ability to develop complex applications in a
distributed, decentralized, and ultimately *free* fashion.
But standards, whether official or _de_facto_ are needed to
allow the mutual benefits of code sharing. Such standards by
no means infringe on your freedom to code whatever you want,
however you like.
> Industry needs standards to make their
> products interchangeable, but this is not a key point for free
> software, because you have the sources, and you have some
> control over them. PostgreSQL is the best example for this;
> originally it did not support SQL, but had some unique features
> other DBMS did not have. As a user you get the benefits of the
> freedom of the developers, but at the price of lacking secondary
> virtues such as standard-conformance.
>
> Why don't we have a generally accepted XML transformation API?
> It would not be very much work to develop such an API, and to
> do a prototype for an implementation. I suppose that auch an
> API is not really needed, at least now.
It is not that easy. It takes interest and consensus. I'm
not sure how widespread is the need for XML processing
capabilities in the O'Caml community, but I have a definite
feeling that consensus would be most difficult to achieve on
an _a_priori_ basis. Probably, the most efficient way to
achieve such consensus would be to develop the
"Super-Duper-XML-lib" and distribute it. Consensus would
simply condense around it.
Ideally, such a library would be built on PXP (a _de_facto_
standard, as I already noted), and implement an XML type
checking à la XSchema, but somehow linked with the O'Caml
type system. The transformation API would then have to
implement the same expressiveness of XSLT while retaining
the static type safety of O'Caml.
This is a wish list I do not address to anyone in
particular. If I were competent enough in markup languages
and related tools I might take up the effort myself. At
present, I do not consider myself apt for such a task, so I
have little choice but to use what tools are available:
XSLT, mainly, and possibly XSchema. Not entirely
satisfactory from my standpoint, but still better (probably)
than having to code XML validation and transformation
functions from scratch in O'Caml.
Regards,
Alex
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^ permalink raw reply [flat|nested] 25+ messages in thread
* Re: [Caml-list] objective caml and industry
2002-08-30 18:15 [Caml-list] objective caml and industry Jonathan Coupe
@ 2002-08-30 23:37 ` Chris Hecker
0 siblings, 0 replies; 25+ messages in thread
From: Chris Hecker @ 2002-08-30 23:37 UTC (permalink / raw)
To: caml-list
> www.jetcafe.org/~npc/doc/euc00-sendmail.html
I was interested to read this, but was sad to see that they didn't
actually ship the app, or even beta test it, according to this quote:
"After performing code cleanup based on Lennart's suggestions, we
prepared for an initial test release of the system during the summer
of 2000. That release has been put on hold while we perform
integration work with another complex legacy application and improve
our monitoring system."
Chris
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^ permalink raw reply [flat|nested] 25+ messages in thread
* Re: [Caml-list] objective caml and industry
@ 2002-08-30 18:15 Jonathan Coupe
2002-08-30 23:37 ` Chris Hecker
0 siblings, 1 reply; 25+ messages in thread
From: Jonathan Coupe @ 2002-08-30 18:15 UTC (permalink / raw)
To: caml-list
[-- Attachment #1: Type: text/plain, Size: 301 bytes --]
www.jetcafe.org/~npc/doc/euc00-sendmail.html
Interested parties might want to look at this article, written by a
(non-Ericson) team that decided to use Erlang for an industrial project.
Reading a software marketing book like "Inside The Tornado" might be
interesting too.
- Jonathan Coupe
[-- Attachment #2: Type: text/html, Size: 704 bytes --]
^ permalink raw reply [flat|nested] 25+ messages in thread
end of thread, other threads:[~2002-09-03 6:50 UTC | newest]
Thread overview: 25+ messages (download: mbox.gz / follow: Atom feed)
-- links below jump to the message on this page --
2002-08-27 3:33 [Caml-list] mixin modules paper and future? Chris Hecker
2002-08-28 8:43 ` Tom Hirschowitz
2002-08-28 19:25 ` Chris Hecker
2002-08-29 10:11 ` M E Leypold @ labnet
2002-08-29 18:47 ` [Caml-list] objective caml and industry james woodyatt
2002-08-29 22:57 ` Michael Vanier
2002-08-29 23:52 ` james woodyatt
2002-08-30 13:13 ` Vitaly Lugovsky
2002-08-30 23:23 ` Michael Vanier
2002-08-30 2:25 ` Chris Hecker
2002-08-30 18:14 ` Jonathan Coupe
2002-09-01 9:18 ` What kind of industry do you mean? (Was: [Caml-list] objective caml and industry) Mattias Waldau
2002-09-01 20:15 ` Markus Mottl
2002-09-01 21:10 ` [Caml-list] wxOCaml? Dave Mason
2002-09-02 6:23 ` [Caml-list] Re: What kind of industry do you mean? (Was: objective caml and industry) Michaël Grünewald
2002-09-02 12:43 ` What kind of industry do you mean? (Was: [Caml-list] " Alessandro Baretta
2002-09-02 22:58 ` Gerd Stolpmann
2002-09-03 6:58 ` [Caml-list] Re: An XML standard API? (was:What kind of industry do you mean?) Alessandro Baretta
2002-09-02 18:15 ` What kind of industry do you mean? (Was: [Caml-list] objective caml and industry) Oleg
2002-08-30 18:14 ` [Caml-list] objective caml and industry Jonathan Coupe
2002-08-31 2:26 ` John Max Skaller
2002-09-02 18:38 ` Oleg
2002-08-30 2:21 ` [Caml-list] mixin modules paper and future? Chris Hecker
2002-08-30 18:15 [Caml-list] objective caml and industry Jonathan Coupe
2002-08-30 23:37 ` Chris Hecker
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