From: "Jim Miller" <gordon.j.miller@gmail.com>
To: caml-list@yquem.inria.fr
Subject: Pattern matching question
Date: Wed, 19 Jul 2006 14:48:03 -0400 [thread overview]
Message-ID: <beed19130607191148k4d94b706mf1f7ce222b1d7fba@mail.gmail.com> (raw)
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I'm trying to use an OCaml program to form an umambiguous protocol
specification. I've convinced myself that by proper definition of my types,
and avoiding using the _ in matches, I can get OCaml to help me verify that
I have a complete specification. I'm doing this by defining a function that
specifies the behavior of one of the protocol partners when it receives a
message. Here is an example of what I have.
let requestOp = REQUEST_KEY | SUCCESS;;
let message = None | Register of requestOp * int;;
let receive idList msg =
match message with
None -> None
| Register( REQUEST_KEY, id ) -> begin
match idList with
[] -> Register(SUCCESS, id)
| l when (List.mem id l) -> Register(Success, (next_available_id
l))
| _ -> Register(Success, id)
;;
The problem is with the final pattern in the inner match expression. I'm
really trying to avoid using _ in patterns so that I'm forced to specify an
action for each possible case (hence the reason I'm trying to use OCaml
here). It appears that since I'm using a guard here that OCaml can't, at
compile time, determine whether or not I'm being exhaustive.
Is there a way to accomplish the same thing as above without using guards so
that OCaml will be able to determine that my match is exhaustive?
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next reply other threads:[~2006-07-19 18:48 UTC|newest]
Thread overview: 4+ messages / expand[flat|nested] mbox.gz Atom feed top
2006-07-19 18:48 Jim Miller [this message]
2006-07-19 18:55 ` [Caml-list] " Seth J. Fogarty
[not found] ` <ad8cfe7e0607191737l551e1d8aif8d5859fb6c398fd@mail.gmail.com>
2006-07-20 1:03 ` Jim Miller
2006-07-20 8:38 ` Luc Maranget
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