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Unexpected behaviour of strings initialized with quotes
- Arthur Chargueraud
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Date: | 2005-11-23 (10:20) |
From: | Arthur Chargueraud <cours_caml@f...> |
Subject: | Unexpected behaviour of strings initialized with quotes |
I am surprized by a difference of behaviour between the strings "bbbb" and (String.make 4 'b'). I have been programming in Caml for a while, and I've always assumed that the two expression would be rather equivalent. The idea is that when writing: let f() = "bbbb" Any call to function f() will return the same string (ie same pointer). This is of course not the case when writing: let f() = String.make 4 'b' Below is a program where this behaviour is causing a problem: code: for i = 0 to 3 do let s = "bbbb" in s.[i] <- 'a'; Printf.printf "string s is now %s\n" s; done; outputs: string s is now abbb string s is now aabb string s is now aaab string s is now aaaa What it means is that this code is just equivalent to: let s = "bbbb" in for i = 0 to 3 do s.[i] <- 'a'; Printf.printf "string s is now %s\n" s; done; which I find really unexpected. I was waiting for: string s is now abbb string s is now babb string s is now bbab string s is now bbba which is what happens when using (String.make 4 'b') inside the loop. This is not a real problem, since it is not usual to modify strings initialized with quotes, but I am just wandering about the reason of such a behaviour... Arthur Chargueraud