Brandon S. Allbery KF8NH wrote:
On Feb 8, 2008, at 11:14 , Stefan Monnier wrote:
You seem to write 12 as 1 :+ 2 instead of () :+ 1 :+ 2. But I
think, the
latter representation should probably be prefered.
(...)
How 'bout treating :+ as similar to `append' rather than similar to
`cons'?
Basically treat :+ as taking 2 numbers (rather than a number and
a digit).
Dumb questions department: why not define e.g. D'0 .. D'9 as () :* 0 ..
() :* 9? Programmers then get D'1 :* 2, but the library sees () :* 1 :* 2.
No, D'0 should be (), not () :* D0. If you allow () :* D0, then you
introduce redundant types for the same number:
In the first case, D'0 :* D'3 == D'3, and D'0 :* D'0 has no instance. In
your example, D'3 and D'0 :* D'3 are equivalent, but no longer unify.
Dan
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