4

I have the following types

type StatusCode = 
    | OK          = 200
    | NoContent   = 204
    | MovedTemp   = 301
    | MovedPerm   = 302
    | SeeOther    = 303
    | NotModified = 304
    | NotFound    = 404
    | ServerError = 500

[<Literal>]
let NoBodyAllowedStatusCodes = [StatusCode.NoContent; StatusCode.NotModified]

And I'm getting a compile-time error that says:

This is not a valid constant expression or custom attribute value

I can't really figure out what's wrong here.

1 Answer 1

6

In F#, and .NET in general, lists cannot be literals (constant in C#/VB.NET). Only primitive values can, like string, bool, etc. The F# 3.0 specification has the guidelines on what can or cannot be a literal in section 10.2.2:

A value that has the Literal attribute is subject to the following restrictions:

  • It may not be marked mutable or inline.
  • It may not also have the ThreadStatic or ContextStatic attributes.
  • The right-hand side expression must be a literal constant expression that is made up of either:
  • A simple constant expression, with the exception of (), native integer literals, unsigned native integer literals, byte array literals, BigInteger literals, and user-defined numeric literals.

—OR—

  • A reference to another literal.

Depending on what you are trying to do, you could make your list static if the let binding is being used in a class. If it is in a module, I'd just remove the Literal attribute since let bindings are immutable by default, anyway.

7
  • The link you gave to MSDN is not exactly relevant. What's listed there is the list of possible types of literals as terms of F# syntax. This is not exactly the same as what can be rendered as a literal in CLI. A CLI literal (or constant) is a value stored in an assembly's metadata and which thus is available to referring assemblies without executing any code. Out of the types listed in your link, you cannot make CLI constants of types decimal, bigint, unativeint or byte[]. On the other hand, CLI allows nulls of any reference type as constants (in F#, nulls are forbidden).
    – ach
    Mar 30, 2015 at 15:16
  • @AndreyChernyakhovskiy I edited to include the relevant part from the F# specification instead. Thanks for pointing that out.
    – vcsjones
    Mar 30, 2015 at 15:22
  • The specification on this is to be found in ecma-international.org/publications/files/ECMA-ST/ECMA-335.pdf, §II.22.9. Quite difficult to read, it is, and lacks info on how all this CLI stuff maps on F# syntax (or C# as well). Would be nice to find an easy explanation.
    – ach
    Mar 30, 2015 at 15:33
  • @AndreyChernyakhovskiy: it's not true that nulls are forbidden in F# (sadly), and you can in fact have null literals. Anyway, lists are certainly not among things you can have literals of.
    – scrwtp
    Mar 30, 2015 at 21:28
  • 1
    It's possible if you decorate your type with the [<AllowNullLiteral>] attribute. Mar 31, 2015 at 9:17

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