I've heard that "first class modules" are coming in OCaml 3.12. What advantages will they offer? What kids of things will be easier? What problem are they trying to solve? A simple example would suffice.
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It's only one possible applications, but first class modules make it easy to encode existential types, with basically a module packing an existential type and a value using this type). For example, See Alain Frisch work on Dynamic types (code taken from Alain Frisch work on dyntypes : http://caml.inria.fr/cgi-bin/viewcvs.cgi/ocaml/branches/dyntypes/stdlib/dyntypes.ml?rev=9460&view=auto )
The idea here is that "ttype" is a concrete representation of that type, an algebraic datatype with Int, Float constructors and so on, and you have here a value, whose type is concealed, but that carries a concrete representation of that type, that you can use for example to get a safer serialization/deserialization. |
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Maybe a bit late, but the new paper First-class modules: hidden power and tantalizing promises is exactly on topic. It's a set of recipes/pearls around first-class modules, by Oleg Kiselyov (oleg) and Jeremy Yallop (author, for example, of the Deriving project). |
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