package yocaml
 sectionYPositions = computeSectionYPositions($el), 10)"
  x-init="setTimeout(() => sectionYPositions = computeSectionYPositions($el), 10)"
  >
  
  
  Core engine of the YOCaml Static Site Generator
Install
    
    dune-project
 Dependency
Authors
Maintainers
Sources
  
    
      yocaml-2.1.0.tbz
    
    
        
    
  
  
  
    
  
  
    
  
        sha256=e5ab173efd4c356dfee3e9af2165762ec4f1b5d38bdf1000d13e5eb6f18edbae
    
    
  sha512=77ce2f269a6058c91ed75dee164cf9073147aa5d48c5dbdb2d6b282fc184d3a9b8155e772dd24acb8c0618ef7e47c0222bf65e13ecc3e08fab87351ea4f27192
    
    
  doc/yocaml/Yocaml/Data/Validation/Syntax/index.html
Module Validation.SyntaxSource
Binding operators are used to link fields together to build a complete validation.
A typical usage is:
  record (fun assoc ->
      let+ field_a = required assoc "fieldA" validator_a
      and+ field_b = optional assoc "fieldB" validator_b
      and+ field_c = required associ "fieldB" validator_c in
      { field_a, field_b, field_c })let+ x = v in  k x is map (fun x -> k x) v.
let+ x = v and+ y = w in k x y is map2 (fun x y -> k x y) v w.
let* r = f x in return r tries to produce a result Ok from the expression f x, if the expression returns Error _, the computation chain is interrupted.
Warning: the semantics of let* are significantly different from a succession of let+ ... and+ ... which allow errors to be collected in parallel (independently), whereas let* captures them sequentially. The composition of let* and let+ is tricky and let* should only be used to validate preconditions.
 sectionYPositions = computeSectionYPositions($el), 10)"
  x-init="setTimeout(() => sectionYPositions = computeSectionYPositions($el), 10)"
  >