Then maybe you should try godi. It is the camlist's cabal, but while the 
authors of cabal have really done a good job, godi is still quite poorly 
written, and has not gained wide acceptance in the community.

And, yes, there are cool applications written in ocaml. People claim that the 
best application ever written in ocaml is unison, but also since it is the only 
language french engineers learn at school, there are a lot of private 
applications such as the controller for line 14 of the parisian metro ("the" 
automatic line in Paris), or maybe things at airbus. And of course, coq is also 
written in ocaml.

And, if the organization that developed caml (inria) had not stopped financing 
it, there would be a concurrent GC (in fact the algorithm exists, but has never 
been implemented), the FFI would probably be as nice as haskell's, and more 
than one person in the world would understand the code of ocamlc,
Also, maybe there would be a norm for ocaml, and microsoft wouldn't have dumped 
the language as f#.

Conclusion : if you want to be a researcher, come to France, it is pretty cool 
here...


El 18/04/2010, a las 22:37, Richard O'Keefe escribió:

> There are some really impressive applications done with Ocaml,
> some of which I have wanted to try out.
> I have never had any difficulty installing the core Ocaml system,
> but have never yet succeeded in getting the additional libraries
> put together.
> (Home-brew package systems are not _always_ a good idea.)
> 
> 

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