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Home/ Questions/Q 7586145
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Editorial Team
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Editorial Team
Asked: May 30, 20262026-05-30T19:21:11+00:00 2026-05-30T19:21:11+00:00

Does the following code simulate the difference between protected variables and public variables in

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Does the following code simulate the difference between protected variables and public variables in F#? Or am I missing something?

let (=?) (d:Dictionary<'a,'b>) (x:'a) = d.TryGetValue(x)

let psi (f:'a -> 'b) (d:Dictionary<'a,'b>) = // public dictionary
    let lambda (x:'a) = 
        match (d =? x) with
        | true, i -> i
        | false, _ -> d.Add(x,f x)
                      f x
    lambda

let mem (f:'a -> 'b) = // protected dictionary
    let d = new Dictionary<'a,'b>()
    let orize (input:'a) = 
        match (d =? input) with
        | true, i -> i
        | false, _ -> d.Add(input,f input)
                      f input
    orize

Clarification would be excellent.

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  1. Editorial Team
    Editorial Team
    2026-05-30T19:21:13+00:00Added an answer on May 30, 2026 at 7:21 pm

    No, what you actually demonstrate is scope of values in F#.

    In the first approach, the dictionary is declared at the module level; therefore, any function in the module can access/modify it. The point is more clear if you drop that second argument in the psi function. After each time psi invoked, the dictionary is still available and psi is a true memoize combinator.

    The second approach has dictionary declaration inside a function, and the scope of this dictionary is the function only. Each time you call mem, it creates a fresh dictionary so you don’t really memorize anything.

    In terms of access modifier, your example is closer to public/private values. These keywords are available in F#. The protected modifier is related to inheritance which you will encounter much less often in F#. And it’s another story to tell.

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