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Polymorphic variants question
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Date: | 2006-09-01 (19:57) |
From: | David Allsopp <dra-news@m...> |
Subject: | RE: [Caml-list] Re: Polymorphic variants question |
-----Original Message----- From: skaller [mailto:skaller@users.sourceforge.net] Sent: 01 September 2006 20:00 > On Fri, 2006-09-01 at 14:33 -0400, Chris King wrote: > > On 9/1/06, David Allsopp <dra-news@metastack.com> wrote: <snip> > By using: > > let id = function `A -> `A | `C -> `C > > the compiler knows (id x) can include `A > and it can include `C, the case > > (true, `B) > > being returned says the return type can also be `B. > So the return type can be bool followed by `A, `B, or `C. > > Hope that makes sense :) Which is my understanding too - the type of id is [< `A | `C] -> [> `A | `C] which allows x to be "used" in a [> `A | `B | `C] context without actually changing the type of x while type inference is going on. Which, I guess I should've spotted, means I can write: let f (x : [`A | `C]) : bool * [`A | `B | `C] = if x = `A then (true, `B) else (false, (x :> [`A | `B | `C])) Which eliminates id and keeps the whole thing done in the type system (whilst an identity function I'm sure is spotted and removed by the compiler, it's a shame to have it there just to keep the type checker happy!). Incidentally, if I use an annotation free version let f x = if x = `A then (true, `B) else (false, (x : [< `A | `C] :> [> `A | `C])) then the inferred type of x is [< `A | `C > `A ] ... what does that mean? > -- > John Skaller <skaller at users dot sf dot net> > Felix, successor to C++: http://felix.sf.net Thanks for the help! (incidentally, I don't call labels A, B, C, ... in real code, honest!)