module Validated_intf:sig
..end
Suppose one wants to have a type of positive integers:
module Positive_int = Validated.Make (struct
type t = int
let here = _here_
let validate = Int.validate_positive
end)
With this, one is certain that any value of type Positive_int.t
has passed
Int.validate_positive
.
One can call Positive_int.create_exn n
to create a new positive int from an n
,
which will of course raise if n <= 0
. One can call Positive_int.raw positive_int
to get the int
from a Positive_int.t
.
val __pa_ounit_275876e34cf609db118f3d84b799a790 : string
Suppose one wants to have a type of positive integers:
module Positive_int = Validated.Make (struct
type t = int
let here = _here_
let validate = Int.validate_positive
end)
With this, one is certain that any value of type Positive_int.t
has passed
Int.validate_positive
.
One can call Positive_int.create_exn n
to create a new positive int from an n
,
which will of course raise if n <= 0
. One can call Positive_int.raw positive_int
to get the int
from a Positive_int.t
.
module type Raw =sig
..end
module type Raw_binable =sig
..end
module type Validated =sig
..end
module type Validated_binable =sig
..end
module type S =sig
..end
Suppose one wants to have a type of positive integers:
module Positive_int = Validated.Make (struct
type t = int
let here = _here_
let validate = Int.validate_positive
end)
With this, one is certain that any value of type Positive_int.t
has passed
Int.validate_positive
.
One can call Positive_int.create_exn n
to create a new positive int from an n
,
which will of course raise if n <= 0
. One can call Positive_int.raw positive_int
to get the int
from a Positive_int.t
.
here
will appear in validation-failure error messages.
validate_binio_deserialization
controls whether when the binio representation of a
value is deserialized, the resulting value is validated. Whether one needs to
validate values upon deserialization depends on how serialization is being used. If
one only ever serializes/deserializes so that the validation function is the same on
both ends, then one need not validate upon deserialization, because only values that
already pass the validation function can be serialized.
If the validation functions in the serializer and deserializer may be different,
e.g. because of two different versions of the code compiled at different times, then
it is possible to serialize a value that may fail validation upon deserialization.
In that case, having validate_binio_deserialization = true
is necessary to prevent
creating values that don't pass the validation function.