Hi,
there used to be a variant adapter for fusion sequences, but it has
been rightfully removed:
on Wed Dec 19 2007, Joel de Guzman
I intend to remove the variant adapter from fusion. After thorough investigation, I think now that the move to make variant a fusion sequence is rather quirky. A variant will always have a size==1 regardless of the number of types it can contain and there's no way to know at compile time what it contains. Iterating over its types is simply wrong. All these imply that the variant is *not* a fusion sequence.
Let's say I have a recursive variant and would like to flatten the variant to create some sort of heterogeneous sequence from it. Particularly, I would like to chop the variant into multiple disjunct Fusion sequences, each of which are handed to generic component that operates with Fusion sequences. The above suggests that Fusion is not the right tool. What would be a better approach to handle this problem? Should I split the variant into smaller variants instead? What made Fusion so attractive is the notion of tiers, i.e., light-weight views of references to the actual data. Is there a variant equivalent of tiers? Matthias -- Matthias Vallentin vallentin@icsi.berkeley.edu http://www.icir.org/matthias