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by faresahmed
185 days ago
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I think that it's a generic programming problem: pointers are easier because the type of the pointee is easy to get (a deref) and also its location (memory) but with index-based handles into containers you can no longer say that given a handle `H` (type H = u32) I can use it to get a type `T` and not only that, you've also introduced the notion of "where", that even if for each type `T` there exists a unique handle type `H` you don't know into which container instance does that handle belong. What you need is a unique handle type per container instance. So "Handle of Pool<T>" != "Handle of Pool<T>" unless the Pool is bound to the same variable. As far as I know no language allows expressing that kind of thing. |
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But from what I understand (being a nonexpert on Scala), this scheme actually causes a lot of problems. I think I've even heard that it adds more undecidability to the type system? So I'm exploring ways of managing context that don't depend on inferring backward from the type.