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authorGravatar Adam Chlipala <adam@chlipala.net>2012-05-05 12:58:13 -0400
committerGravatar Adam Chlipala <adam@chlipala.net>2012-05-05 12:58:13 -0400
commita424e0352aff3490a58d19de5ebf4a164bd03b65 (patch)
tree9cc3661046de89d0263f025bdbf935cce233811d /doc
parentf2ae62f46ac8b9cefc841bd064c7ea8317cc9752 (diff)
-dumpTypesOnError
Diffstat (limited to 'doc')
-rw-r--r--doc/manual.tex2
1 files changed, 1 insertions, 1 deletions
diff --git a/doc/manual.tex b/doc/manual.tex
index 853febe7..1976199d 100644
--- a/doc/manual.tex
+++ b/doc/manual.tex
@@ -201,7 +201,7 @@ urweb -tc P
\end{verbatim}
It is often worthwhile to run \cd{urweb} in this mode, because later phases of compilation can take significantly longer than type-checking alone, and the type checker catches many errors that would traditionally be found through debugging a running application.
-A related option is \cd{-dumpTypes}, which, as long as parsing succeeds, outputs to stdout a summary of the kinds of all identifiers declared with \cd{con} and the types of all identifiers declared with \cd{val} or \cd{val rec}. This information is dumped even if there are errors during type inference. Compiler error messages go to stderr, not stdout, so it is easy to distinguish the two kinds of output programmatically.
+A related option is \cd{-dumpTypes}, which, as long as parsing succeeds, outputs to stdout a summary of the kinds of all identifiers declared with \cd{con} and the types of all identifiers declared with \cd{val} or \cd{val rec}. This information is dumped even if there are errors during type inference. Compiler error messages go to stderr, not stdout, so it is easy to distinguish the two kinds of output programmatically. A refined version of this option is \cd{-dumpTypesOnError}, which only has an effect when there are compilation errors.
It may be useful to combine another option \cd{-unifyMore} with \cd{-dumpTypes}. Ur/Web type inference proceeds in a series of stages, where the first is standard Hindley-Milner type inference as in ML, and the later phases add more complex aspects. By default, an error detected in one phase cuts off the execution of later phases. However, the later phases might still determine more values of unification variables. These value choices might be ``misguided,'' since earlier phases have not come up with reasonable types at a coarser detail level; but the unification decisions may still be useful for debugging and program understanding. So, if a run with \cd{-dumpTypes} leaves unification variables undetermined in positions where you would like to see best-effort guesses instead, consider \cd{-unifyMore}. Note that \cd{-unifyMore} has no effect when type inference succeeds fully, but it may lead to many more error messages when inference fails.