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In F#, is it possible to have a tryParse function that infers the target type

Presently we do this...

let parseDate defaultVal text = 
match DateTime.TryParse s with
| true, d -> d
| _       -> defaultVal

Is it possible to do this...

let d : DateTime = tryParse DateTime.MinValue "2015.05.01"
like image 869
George Avatar asked Oct 16 '15 01:10

George


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1 Answers

Yes. Welcome to the world of member constraints, ref, and byref values.

  let inline tryParseWithDefault 
      defaultVal 
      text 
      : ^a when ^a : (static member TryParse : string * ^a byref -> bool) 
      = 
    let r = ref defaultVal
    if (^a : (static member TryParse: string * ^a byref -> bool) (text, &r.contents)) 
    then !r 
    else defaultVal
  1. defaultVal and text are formal parameters and will be inferred. Here, text is already constrained to be string because it is used as the first parameter in a call to the static method, SomeType.TryParse, as explain later. defaultVal is constrained to be whatever ^a is since it is a possible result value per the if..then..else expression.
  2. ^a is a statically resolved type parameter (vs a generic type parameter of the form 'a). In particular, ^a will be resolved at compile time to a specific type. Consequently, the function hosting it must be marked inline, which means that each invocation of the function will become an in-place replacement at that invocation with this body of the function, wherein each static type parameter will become a specific type; in this case, whatever type defaultVal is. There is no base type or interface type constraints restricting the possible type of defaultVal. However, you can provide static and instance member constraints such as is done here. Specifically, the result value (and therefore the type of defaultVal) must apparently have a static member called, TryParse, that accepts a string and a reference to a mutable instance of that type, and returns a boolean value. This constraint is made explicit by the stated return type on the line beginning with : ^a when .... The fact that defaultVal itself is a possible result constrains it to be of the same type as ^a. (The constraint is also implicit elsewhere throughout the function which is unnecessary as explained below).
  3. : ^a when ^a : (static .... describes the result type, ^a, as having a static member called TryParse of type string * ^a byref -> bool. That is to say, the result type must have a static member called TryParse that accepts a string, a reference to an instance of itself (and therefore a mutable instance), and will return a boolean value. This description is how F# matches the .Net definition of TryParse on DateTime, Int32, TimeSpan, etc. types. Note, byref is F# equivalent of C#'s out or ref parameter modifier.
  4. let r = ref defaultVal creates a reference type and copies the provided value, defaultVal, into it. ref is one of the ways F# creates mutable types. The other is with the mutable keyword. The difference is that mutable stores its value on the stack while ref stores its in main memory/heap and holds an address (on the stack) to it. The latest version of F# will seek to automatically upgrade mutable designations to ref depending on the context, allowing you to code only in terms of mutable.
  5. if (^a : (static... is an if statement over the invocation results of the TryParse method on the statically inferred type, ^a. This TryParse is passed, (text, &r.contents), per its (string * ^a byref) signature. Here, &r.contents provides the reference to the mutable content of r (simulating C#'s out or ref parameter) per the expectation of TryParse. Note, we are off the reservation here and certain F# niceties for inter-operating with the .Net framework do not extend out this far; in particular, the automatic rolling up of space separated F# parameters into .net framework function parameters as a tuple is not available. Hence, the parameters are provide to the function as a tuple, (text, &r.contents).
  6. !r is how you read a reference value. r.Value would also work.

The TryParse methods provided by .Net seems to always set a value for the out parameter. Consequently, a default value is not strictly required. However, you need a result value holder, r, and it must have an initial value, even null. I didn't like null. Another option, of course, is to impose another constraint on ^a that demands a default value property of some sort.

The following subsequent solution removes the need for a default parameter by using the Unchecked.defaultof< ^a > to derive a suitable placeholder value from the "inferred result" type (yes, it feels like magic). It also uses the Option type to characterize success and failure obtaining a result value. The result type is therefore, ^a option.

tryParse 
    text 
    : ^a option when ^a : (static member TryParse : string * ^a byref -> bool) 
    = 
  let r = ref Unchecked.defaultof< ^a >
  if (^a : (static member TryParse: string * ^a byref -> bool) (text, &r.contents)) 
  then Some (!r)
  else None

And, per @kvb suggestions, the following brevity is possible. In this case, type inference is employed to both stipulate the type constraint on ^a as a consequence of it's invocation in the if (^a : ...)) expression and to also establish the type of the mutable buffer r for TryParse's out parameter. I have since come to learn this is how FsControl does some of it's magic

let inline tryParse text : ^a option = 
  let mutable r = Unchecked.defaultof<_>
  if (^a : (static member TryParse: string * ^a byref -> bool) (text, &r)) 
  then Some r
  else None

let inline tryParseWithDefault defaultVal text : ^a = 
  match tryParse text with
  | Some d -> d
  | _      -> defaultVal

Wherein the usage would be...

> let x:DateTime option = tryParse "December 31, 2014";;
val x : DateTime option = Some 2014-12-31 12:00:00 a.m.

> let x:bool option = tryParse "false";;
val x : bool option = Some false

> let x:decimal option = tryParse "84.32";;    
val x : decimal option = Some 84.32M

For the case of using type constraints on instance member such as type constraining for Fsharp's dynamic member lookup operator, ?, such that the type of its target must contain a FindName:string -> obj member for use in resolving member lookup requests, the syntax is as follows:

let inline (?) (targetObj:^a) (property:string) : 'b =
    (^a : (member FindName:string -> obj) (targetObj, property)) :?> 'b

Note:

  1. The signature of instance methods must explicitly specify their self object, which is normally a hidden first parameter of object methods
  2. This solution also promotes the result to the type of 'b

A sample usage would be the following:

let button : Button = window?myButton
let report : ReportViewer = window?reportViewer1
like image 96
George Avatar answered Oct 08 '22 09:10

George