Hi,
I am trying to do pattern matching on unicode characters, represented by
integers. I would like to do something like that
let f c =
match c with
0xff .. 0xfff - foo
I know we can pattern match over char intervals but It doesn't be to be the
case for char intervals. Some I have two
I remember wondering the same thing and the answer can be found in the
ocaml parser: char intervals are expanded at parse time to the the
full list of characters. This would blow up if you were to use ints,
int64 etc
HTH,
Till
On Sat, Jan 21, 2012 at 1:14 PM, Pierre Chopin pie...@punchup.com
I believe your best bet is the 'if .. then .. else' chain. You may
also use 'when' clauses in pattern matching, but those don't scale too
well and are best avoided if their are the only content of your
content: pattern matching are good for structural deconstruction and
environment binding, but
On 01/21/2012 01:14 PM, Pierre Chopin wrote:
Hi,
I am trying to do pattern matching on unicode characters, represented by
integers. I would like to do something like that
let f c =
match c with
0xff .. 0xfff - foo
I know we can pattern match over char intervals but It doesn't be to be