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A strange typing error with polymorphic variants
-
Marc de Falco
-
Jake Donham
- Vincent Aravantinos
-
Jake Donham
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Date: | 2009-10-27 (18:38) |
From: | Vincent Aravantinos <vincent.aravantinos@g...> |
Subject: | Re: [Caml-list] A strange typing error with polymorphic variants |
Le 27 oct. 09 à 19:24, Jake Donham a écrit : > On Tue, Oct 27, 2009 at 3:28 AM, Marc de Falco <marc@de-falco.fr> > wrote: >> The following code : >> type 'a p = R of 'a t | E of float >> and 'a t = { mutable p : 'a p; c : 'a } >> let f = >> let x = sqrt(2.0) in >> fun () -> { c = `A; p = E 0.0 } >> >> generates the error : >> The type of this expression, unit -> _[> `A ] t, >> contains type variables that cannot be generalized >> >> but if I change the x definition to "let x = 2.0 in" then it works. > > I think this is just the value restriction. The type of f is > generalized only if the right hand side is a value (rather than an > expression needing some computation); in your examples the one that > fails is not a value, the others are. It looks like there is a > relaxation to allow let bindings which are themselves values. With the -dlambda option, the "sqrt(2.0)" version gives: (let (f/92 (let (x/93 (caml_sqrt_float 2.0)) (function param/94 (makemutable 0 [1: 0.0] 65a)))) whereas the "2.0" version gives: (let (f/96 (let (x/97 2.0) (function param/98 (makemutable 0 [1: 0.0] 65a)))) i.e. this last version is inlined. I thought the yping was done before (??) V.