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by SoothingSorbet
638 days ago
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There's no difference there because the types are already disjoint. Say you wanted to define some function taking `YYMMDD | MMDDYY`. If both YYMMDD and MMDDYY are just aliases to `str`, then you gain no information, you cannot discriminate on which one it is, since the union `str | str` just reduces to `str`. Sum types are disjointed unions, you can't just say `str | str`, the terms are wrapped in unique nominal data constructors, like: enum Date { MMDDYY(String), YYMMDD(String) } Then when accepting a `Date` you can discriminate which format it's in. You could do the same in Python by defining two unique types and using `MMDDYY | YYMMDD`. |
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