OCaml Cheat Sheets
When you are beginning in a new programming language, it is sometimes helpful to have an overview of the documentation, that you can pin on your wall and easily have a look at it while you are programming. Since we couldn’t find such Cheat Sheets, we decided to start writting our own cheat sheets for OCaml.
Beware, these documents are drafts, that we plan to improve in the next months. In the meantime, feel free to tell us how we could improve them, what is missing, and where the focus should be !
- The OCaml Language (June 8, 2011)
- OCaml Standard Tools (June 7, 2011)
- OCaml Standard Library (June 7, 2011)
- OCaml Emacs Mode (Tuareg) (June 27, 2011)
About OCamlPro:
OCamlPro is a R&D lab founded in 2011, with the mission to help industrial users benefit from state-of-the art programming languages like OCaml and Rust.
We design, create and implement custom ad-hoc software for our clients. We also have a long experience in developing and maintaining open-source tooling for OCaml, such as Opam, TryOCaml, ocp-indent, ocp-index and ocp-browser, and we contribute to the core-development of OCaml, notably with our work on the Flambda optimizer branch.
Another area of expertise is that of Formal Methods, with tools such as our SMT Solver Alt-Ergo (check our Alt-Ergo Users'). We also provide vocational trainings in OCaml and Rust, and we can build courses on formal methods on-demand. Please reach out, we'll be delighted to discuss your challenges: contact@ocamlpro.com or book a quick discussion.
Most Recent Articles
2022
2021
- Verification for Dummies: SMT and Induction
- Generating static and portable executables with OCaml
- opam 2.1.0 is released!
- opam 2.0.9 release
- Detecting identity functions in Flambda
- Détection de fonctions d’identité dans Flambda
- opam 2.1.0~rc2 released
- Tutorial: Format Module of OCaml
- Réunion annuelle du Club des utilisateurs d’Alt-Ergo 2021
- New Try-Alt-Ergo
- opam 2.1.0~beta4 released
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- 2020 at OCamlPro
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2020