From: Leo P White <lpw25@cam.ac.uk>
To: Dario Teixeira <darioteixeira@yahoo.com>
Cc: "caml-list@inria.fr" <caml-list@inria.fr>
Subject: Re: [Caml-list] GADTs and parsers
Date: 15 Jul 2012 20:55:26 +0100 [thread overview]
Message-ID: <Prayer.1.3.5.1207152055260.20778@hermes-2.csi.cam.ac.uk> (raw)
In-Reply-To: <1342371289.7422.YahooMailNeo@web111511.mail.gq1.yahoo.com>
What about something like (not really tested):
type _ guard_t =
| Nonlinked: [> `Nonlink ] guard_t
| Either: [> `Nonlink | `Link ] guard_t
let inlineseq_from_astseq seq =
let rec process : type a. a guard_t -> ast_t -> a inline_t =
fun guard ast ->
match (guard, ast) with
| (Nonlinked, Ast_Text txt) -> Text txt
| (Either, Ast_Text txt) -> Text txt
| (x, Ast_Bold xs) -> Bold (List.map (process x) xs)
| (Either, Ast_Link lnk) -> Link lnk
| (Either, Ast_Mref (lnk, xs))
-> Mref (lnk, List.map (process Nonlinked) xs)
| _ -> assert false
in List.map (process Either) seq
Leo
On Jul 15 2012, Dario Teixeira wrote:
>Hi,
>
> I'm revisiting an old problem with 4.00's newfangled GADTs. Suppose you
> have four kinds of inline nodes, two of which (Text and Link) are leaves,
> while the other two (Bold and Mref) are the parents of other nodes.
> Moreover, you want to enforce the invariant that a "linkish" node (Link
> and Mref) may not be the ancestor of another linkish node. One possible
> implementation:
>
>type _ inline_t =
> | Text: string -> [> `Nonlink ] inline_t
> | Bold: 'a inline_t list -> 'a inline_t
> | Link: string -> [> `Link ] inline_t
> | Mref: string * [< `Nonlink ] inline_t list -> [> `Link ] inline_t
>
>
> Defining a simple transformation function (in this case one which
> uppercases all text) is also straightforward, just as long as one
> includes the proper type annotations:
>
>let uppercase seq =
> let rec process: type a. a inline_t -> a inline_t = function
> | Text txt -> Text (String.uppercase txt)
> | Bold xs -> Bold (List.map process xs)
> | Link lnk -> Link lnk
> | Mref (lnk, xs) -> Mref (lnk, List.map process xs)
> in List.map process seq
>
>
> But suppose now that I got from a parser a ast_t value with an almost
> identical structure to inline_t, with the exception that it does not
> intrinsically satisfy the latter's invariant: (Note: for this toy
> example it may well be easy to design the parser grammar such that the
> invariant is always preserved; but suppose you're dealing with a "dumb"
> parser)
>
>type ast_t =
> | Ast_Text of string
> | Ast_Bold of ast_t list
> | Ast_Link of string
> | Ast_Mref of string * ast_t list
>
>
> Below is one possible implementation of a function that converts the
> possibly "broken" ast_t into an inline_t. Note how the processing is
> split into two separate functions -- one which deals only with nonlinks,
> and other that takes anything -- so we can be sure to satisfy the GADT
> constraints.
>
>let inlineseq_from_astseq seq =
> let rec process_nonlink = function
> | Ast_Text txt -> Text txt
> | Ast_Bold xs -> Bold (List.map process_nonlink xs)
> | _ -> assert false in
> let rec process_any = function
> | Ast_Text txt -> Text txt
> | Ast_Bold xs -> Bold (List.map process_any xs)
> | Ast_Link lnk -> Link lnk
> | Ast_Mref (lnk, xs) -> Mref (lnk, List.map process_nonlink xs)
> in List.map process_any seq
>
>
> Now here's my problem: suppose I wanted to avoid the branch duplication
> present in the above function. The code below seems to do the trick,
> while at the same time ensuring that the result is always a valid
> inline_t. However, the compiler has trouble seeing that the code is a
> sound way to produce convert an ast_t into an inline_t, and rejects the
> code. Moreover, it is not enough to simply add the type annotations for
> subfunction 'process', as was done in 'uppercase'.
>
> let inlineseq_from_astseq seq = let rec process allow_link ast =
> match (allow_link, ast) with | (_, Ast_Text txt) -> Text
> txt | (x, Ast_Bold xs) -> Bold (List.map (process x)
> xs) | (true, Ast_Link lnk) -> Link lnk | (false,
> Ast_Link _) -> assert false | (true, Ast_Mref (lnk, xs))
> -> Mref (lnk, List.map (process false) xs) | (false, Ast_Mref
> _) -> assert false in List.map (process true) seq
>
>
> Can the single function approach be made to work? I'm having trouble
> figuring out just exactly what sort of help the compiler may require to
> see the code above as correct... (Assuming it is correct, of course...)
>
>Thanks in advance for your time!
>Cheers,
>Dario Teixeira
>
>
>
next prev parent reply other threads:[~2012-07-15 19:55 UTC|newest]
Thread overview: 10+ messages / expand[flat|nested] mbox.gz Atom feed top
2012-07-15 16:54 Dario Teixeira
2012-07-15 17:43 ` Gabriel Scherer
2012-07-15 18:58 ` Dario Teixeira
2012-07-15 20:37 ` Gabriel Scherer
2012-07-15 19:55 ` Leo P White [this message]
2012-07-16 14:45 ` Dario Teixeira
2012-07-15 22:41 ` Jacques Garrigue
2012-07-16 8:50 ` Leo P White
2012-07-16 10:06 ` Leo P White
2012-07-16 15:12 ` Dario Teixeira
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