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polymorphism - Why is OCaml's (+) not polymorphic?

I am an OCaml newbie. I like OCaml's speed but I don't fully understand its design. For example, I would like the + operator to be polymorphic to support integer, float and so on.

Why do we need +.?

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I would like the '+' operator to be polymorphic to support integer, float and so on. Why do we need '+.'?

Excellent question. There are many subtle trade-offs involved here.

The advantages of not overloading operators (as in OCaml) are:

  • Type inference is simpler and more predictable.
  • Code is more composable: moving code from one place to another cannot affect its meaning.
  • Predictable performance: you always know exactly which function is being invoked.

The disadvantages are:

  • Number of different operators quickly gets out of control: + for int, +. for float, +/ for arbitrary-precision rationals, +| for vectors, +|| for matrices and the complex numbers, low-dimensional vectors and matrices, homogeneous coordinates etc.

Some alternatives are:


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