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Benchmarks against imperative languages
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Date: | 2006-03-05 (08:23) |
From: | Martin Jambon <martin_jambon@e...> |
Subject: | Re: [Caml-list] Looking for suggestions on self-referential object definitions |
On Sat, 4 Mar 2006, David Powers wrote: > I am in the middle of hacking together a rogue-like game in OCaml for fun and > to get a better feel for the language, and I have come across a stumbling > block. Specifically I began to model items in the game as objects deriving > from a base item class. All well and good until I tried to come up with a > way to model a container (like a backpack, or sack). The container itself > was an item, that could hold other items - including, possibly, other > containers. > > Some brief dabbling led me to the idea that I could store the items in the > container in a list using a variant type to differentiate the specific types > of items - but I can't for the life of me think how to add containers to that > type list without having defined containers first. I've included the simple > code below so that hopefully some smart person can point out how dumb I'm > being. ;) > > -David What you are doing is correct, you just need to tell the compiler about the type of the items. There are a several ways of doing this, here is one: class virtual item = object (self) val mutable name = "" method name = name method set_name newname = name <- newname end ;; class weapon = object (self) inherit item end ;; type 'a item = [ `Container of 'a | `Weapon of weapon ] class container = object (self) inherit item val mutable items : container item list = [] method add newitem = items <- (newitem :: items) method contents = items method remove i = items <- List.filter (fun x -> x != i) items method contents_to_string = let print_item i = match i with | `Weapon w -> Printf.sprintf "%s (weapon)" w#name | `Container c -> Printf.sprintf "%s (container) - Containing:\n%s" c#name c#contents_to_string in String.concat "\n" (List.map print_item items) end ;; Another possibility is to define the type of the objects without defining a class or class type, so that you can write directly a recursive type definition separately from the class definition: type obj = < content : item list > and item = [ `A | `B of obj ] (* BTW I don't know how to tell the compiler that the class creates objects of type obj, but this can be done: *) class c = object method content : item list = [] end Martin -- Martin Jambon, PhD http://martin.jambon.free.fr Visit http://wikiomics.org, bioinformatics wiki