Domanda

Here's what can be done in C# -

var two = 2;
System.Linq.Expressions.Expression<System.Func<int, int>> expr = x => x * two;
expr.Compile().Invoke(4); // returns 8

I wish to do the precise equivalent in F#. Here's what I tried, but did not compile -

let two = 2
let expr = (fun x -> x * two) : System.Linq.Expressions.Expression<System.Func<int, int>>
expr.Compile().Invoke(4) // desired to return 8

Perhaps predictably, compilation fails on line 2 with the following error -

"This function takes too many arguments, or is used in a context where a function is not expected."
let expr = (fun x -> x * two) : System.Linq.Expressions.Expression<System.Func<int, int>>
            ^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^
È stato utile?

Soluzione

I'm not sure why you want to avoid using F# quotations - under the cover, they are pretty much the same thing as C# expression trees and if you want to create an expression tree in F#, the compiler will be using quotations under the cover in any case...

Anyway, you can do this without writing explicit <@ .. @> because the compiler can automatically quote a function when it is passed as an argument to a method. So you can do:

type Expr = 
  static member Quote(e:Expression<System.Func<int, int>>) = e

let two = 2
let expr = Expr.Quote(fun x -> x * two) 
expr.Compile().Invoke(4) // desired to return 8

EDIT: However, this really compiles to an F# quotation wrapped in a call that converts it to C# expression tree. So, in the end, you'll get the same thing as if you wrote:

open Microsoft.FSharp.Linq.RuntimeHelpers

let two = 2
let expr = 
  <@ System.Func<_, _>(fun x -> x * two) @>
  |> LeafExpressionConverter.QuotationToExpression 
  |> unbox<Expression<Func<int, int>>>
expr.Compile().Invoke(4) // desired to return 8
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