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Version: 1.4.0

Variants

A variant type is a type that defines a type by the union of non-overlapping cases, so a value of a variant type is either this, or that or... The simplest variant type is equivalent to the enumerated types found in Java, C++, JavaScript etc.

Here is how we define a coin as being either head or tail (and nothing else):

type coin = ["Head"] | ["Tail"];
let head: coin = Head();
let tail: coin = Tail();

The names Head and Tail in the definition of the type coin are called data constructors, or variants. In this particular case, they carry no information beyond their names, so they are called constant constructors.

In general, it is interesting for variants to carry some information, and thus go beyond enumerated types. In the following, we show how to define different kinds of users of a system.

type id = nat;
type user =
["Admin", id]
| ["Manager", id]
| ["Guest"];
const bob : user = Admin(1000n);
const carl : user = Guest();

A constant constructor is equivalent to the same constructor taking an argument of type unit, so, for example, Guest() is the same value as Guest([]) or Guest(unit).