I have this piece of code that contains a camlp4 quotation.
let f_name = "my_func"
<:str_item< value $lid:f_name$ a = a * 2 >>
After running this through camlp4of
, it produces this:
Ast.StExp (_loc,
(Ast.ExApp (_loc,
(Ast.ExApp (_loc, (Ast.ExId (_loc, (Ast.IdLid (_loc, "=")))),
(Ast.ExApp (_loc,
(Ast.ExApp (_loc,
(Ast.ExId (_loc, (Ast.IdLid (_loc, "value")))),
(Ast.ExId (_loc, (Ast.IdLid (_loc, f_name)))))),
(Ast.ExId (_loc, (Ast.IdLid (_loc, "a")))))))),
(Ast.ExApp (_loc,
(Ast.ExApp (_loc, (Ast.ExId (_loc, (Ast.IdLid (_loc, "*")))),
(Ast.ExId (_loc, (Ast.IdLid (_loc, "a")))))),
(Ast.ExInt (_loc, "2")))))))
My question is this, is there anyway to print the generated ocaml code? What camlp4of
command or option should I use to show the code? What I expect to see from the above example is:
value my_func a = a * 2
Is that possible? The reason is because I want to do some debugging to see how the generated ocaml code looks like.
That's a good question I asked myself a few days ago.
You can use `Camlp4.PreCast.Printers.OCaml.print_implem which has the type
value print_implem : ?input_file:string -> ?output_file:string ->
Ast.str_item -> unit;
For example, in the toplevel (with only the output of the last command shown):
# #use "topfind";;
# #require "camlp4";;
# #load "camlp4of.cma";;
# open Camlp4.PreCast;;
# let _loc = Loc.ghost;;
# let test =
let f_name = "my_func" in
<:str_item< value $lid:f_name$ a = a * 2 >>;;
# Printers.OCaml.print_implem test;;
let _ = (value my_func a) = (a * 2);;
- : unit = ()
Another solution is to craft a syntax extension that will produce the output you're looking for. For example, a Camlp4AstFilter that would just ignore its input, and return your stuff as output, so you can use camlp4of my_filter.cmo -str ''
to get the AST you're looking for.
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