diff options
Diffstat (limited to 'standard-ml.html.markdown')
| -rw-r--r-- | standard-ml.html.markdown | 18 | 
1 files changed, 9 insertions, 9 deletions
| diff --git a/standard-ml.html.markdown b/standard-ml.html.markdown index b586efa5..ab5e4b84 100644 --- a/standard-ml.html.markdown +++ b/standard-ml.html.markdown @@ -199,17 +199,17 @@ val hmm = answer "What is the meaning of life, the universe and everything?"  (* Functions can take several arguments by taking one tuples as argument: *)  fun solve2 (a : real, b : real, c : real) = -    ( Math.sqrt (~b + Math.sqrt(b * b - 4.0*a*c) / (2.0 * a), -      Math.sqrt (~b - Math.sqrt(b * b - 4.0*a*c) / (2.0 * a) ) +    ( (~b + Math.sqrt(b * b - 4.0*a*c)) / (2.0 * a), +      (~b - Math.sqrt(b * b - 4.0*a*c)) / (2.0 * a) )  (* Sometimes, the same computation is carried out several times. It makes sense     to save and re-use the result the first time. We can use "let-bindings": *)  fun solve2 (a : real, b : real, c : real) =      let val discr  = b * b - 4.0*a*c -        val sqr = Math.sqrt d +        val sqr = Math.sqrt discr          val denom = 2.0 * a -    in (~b + sq / denom, -        ~b - sq / denom) end +    in ((~b + sqr) / denom, +        (~b - sqr) / denom) end  (* Pattern matching is a funky part of functional programming.  It is an @@ -273,10 +273,10 @@ fun say(col) =      raise Fail "Unknown color"  (* Datatypes are very often used in combination with pattern matching *) -fun say Red = "You are red!" +fun say Red   = "You are red!"    | say Green = "You are green!" -  | say Blue = "You are blue!" -  | _ = raise Fail "Unknown color" +  | say Blue  = "You are blue!" +  | say _     = raise Fail "Unknown color"  (* Here is a binary tree datatype *) @@ -321,7 +321,7 @@ val test_poem = readPoem "roses.txt"  (* gives [ "Roses are red,",                                                   "Violets are blue.",                                                   "I have a gun.",                                                   "Get in the van." ] *) -~~~~ +```  ## Further learning | 
