package ppx_deriving_scad

  1. Overview
  2. Docs
PPX Deriver for Scad_ml transformation functions

Install

Dune Dependency

Authors

Maintainers

Sources

ppx_deriving_scad-v1.0.0.tbz
sha256=2b1ec77fefe7770ac04efd9cbbb92aa864f4843070ef0fc3937880e593d591b2
sha512=0c13527fdbdf9623837d51a24e282784b796c7f5e4ae38d94004624ec3745ccf84ac72affc2e84bf8aaaafec9c27301b1a73fd08e678f76e79337e6137906140

README.md.html

[@@deriving scad]

ppx_deriving_scad is a PPX deriver that generates functions for the spatial transformation of user defined abstract and record types containing types for which said transformation functions are defined, in particular, the Scad.t and Vec3.t types of the Scad_ml library.

For example:

open Scad_ml

type mark =
  { scad : Scad.three_d Scad.t
  ; origin : Vec3.t
  }
  [@@deriving scad]

Generates:

val translate_mark : Vec3.t -> mark -> mark
val scale_mark : Vec3.t -> mark -> mark
val rotate_mark : Vec3.t -> mark -> mark
val rotate_about_pt_mark : Vec3.t -> Vec3.t -> mark -> mark
val quaternion_mark : Quaternion.t -> mark -> mark
val quaternion_about_pt_mark : Quaternion.t -> Vec3.t -> mark -> mark
val mirror_mark : Vec3.t -> mark -> mark

If the name of the type being derived is t, then the functions generated (and those required to be present for the types inside of a type/record being derived) will be given unqualified names. Notable exceptions to this rule, are the 2D and 3D Scad.t aliases Scad.d2 and Scad.d3, which use the same unquailified basic transformation functions in the Scad module. For example, applying [@@deriving scad] to a lone record type t would give a module that adhered to the following signature.

open Scad_ml

module Mark : sig
  type t =
    { scad : Scad.d3
    ; origin : Vec3.t
    }

  val translate : Vec3.t -> t -> t
  val scale : Vec3.t -> t -> t
  val rotate : Vec3.t -> t -> t
  val rotate_about_pt : Vec3.t -> Vec3.t -> t -> t
  val quaternion : Quaternion.t -> t -> t
  val quaternion_about_pt : Quaternion.t -> Vec3.t -> t -> t
  val mirror : Vec3.t -> t -> t
end = struct
  type t =
    { scad : Scad.three_d Scad.t
    ; origin : Vec3.t
    }
    [@@deriving scad]
end

Basic monadic types and tuples

The list, option, and result types, as well as tuples, are automatically mapped over, without any additional annotation or functions provided.

module Points : sig
  type t = Vec3.t list
  val translate : Vec3.t -> Vec3.t list -> Vec3.t list
  val scale : Vec3.t -> Vec3.t list -> Vec3.t list
  val rotate : Vec3.t -> Vec3.t list -> Vec3.t list
  val rotate_about_pt : Vec3.t -> Vec3.t -> Vec3.t list -> Vec3.t list
  val quaternion : Quaternion.t -> Vec3.t list -> Vec3.t list
  val quaternion_about_pt : Quaternion.t -> Vec3.t -> Vec3.t list -> Vec3.t list
  val mirror : Vec3.t -> Vec3.t list -> Vec3.t list
end = struct
  type t = Vec3.t list [@@deriving scad]
end

Other mappable types

By default, [@@deriving scad] will attempt to map over constructors other than the above basic types by using applying the map function of the relevant module, or for the non-t named type, using the same naming conventions as explained above.

module IntMap = Map.Make (Int)
type vec_map = Vec3.t IntMap.t [@@deriving scad]

Here, IntMap.map will be used to apply transformations to the contained Vec3.t elements. The expected map function should obey the convention of the function f being the first positional argument. If you are following the conventions of Jane Street and/or have base/core open, then you may use [@@deriving scad_jane] which defaults to expecting map functions to accept a keyword parameter ~f instead. If you are deriving a record containing types with mixed mapping conventions, you can make use of the [@scad.map] and [@scad.mapf] attributes to specify fields that do not match your default convention.

If the constructor type is not named t as in this example, then this ppx will attempt to use a function with the suffix _map. For example, if the type above was instead Vec3.t int_map, the function int_map_map will be expected in the scope of the derived type.

Intf generation

Annotating types in module sigs and .mli files will generate the relevant type signatures.

module MaybeScad : sig
  type 's t = 's Scad.t option [@@deriving scad]
end = struct
  type 's t = 's Scad.t option [@@deriving scad]
end

Attributes

[@scad.unit]

This annotation should be applied to abstract types and fields which represent unit vector. Types/fields marked with this will not be subject to transformations that would cause them to lose thier identity as such, or rotate about anything other than the world origin. Thus:

  • translate and scale will not be applied (identity function instead)

  • {rotate,quaternion}_about_pt will be replaced by their pivot translation free counterparts

Usage:

type plane =
  { scad : Scad.three_d Scad.t
  ; normal : Vec3.t [@scad.unit]
  } [@@deriving scad]

In this case the following would hold:

let true =
  let plane =
    { scad = Scad.cube (10., 10., 0.001)
    ; normal = 0., 0., 1.
    }
  in
  let trans = plane_translate (5., 5., 0.) plane in
  Vec3.equal plane.normal trans.normal

[@scad.ignore]

This annotation marks a field (in a record, not applicable to abstract types) to be ignored by all generated transformations. This is useful for ignoring whatever flags/configuration data that you want to carry around along with your type for which the relevant functions have not been implemented.

Usage:

type mark =
  { scad : Scad.three_d Scad.t
  ; origin : Vec3.t
  ; id : int [@scad.ignore]
  } [@@deriving scad]

[@scad.map] and [@scad.mapf]

This annotation marks a type/field for which the transformable type is contained within a mappable type (aka functor), for which map is defined, and whose parameter convention differs from the default specified by the deriver attached to the type declaration.

  • [@@deriving scad] -> positional f expected (e.g. map f)

  • [@@deriving scad_jane] -> keyword ~f expected (e.g. map ~f)

Thus, [@scad.map]indicates that relevant map functions will obey the convention of f being the first positional argument (overiding [@@deriving scad_jane]), whereas [@scad.mapf] indicates that a keyword argument of ~f is expected instead (overiding [@@deriving scad]). These attributes are not required for the list, option, and result types, as they do not rely on any functions in scope.

Usage:

open Base

module IntMap = Caml.Map.Make (Int)

module MixedMaps = struct
  type t =
    { std : Vec3.t IntMap.t
    ; jane : (Vec3.t Map.M(Int).t [@scad.mapf])
    } [@@deriving scad]
end