These last three forms are also available in OCaml, but to use them you'll need to compile and install Oleg Kiselyov's "delimcc" or "caml-shift" library (these names refer to the same library), which you can find [here](http://okmij.org/ftp/continuations/implementations.html#caml-shift). You'll already need to have OCaml installed. It also helps if you already have the findlib package installed, too, [as we discuss here](http://lambda.jimpryor.net/how_to_get_the_programming_languages_running_on_your_computer/). If you're not familiar with how to compile software on your computer, this might be beyond your reach for the time being.
- <a id=delimcc></a>
+ <a id=delimcc></a>
But assuming you do manage to compile and install Oleg's library, here's how you'd use it in an OCaml session:
#require "delimcc";; (* loading Oleg's library this way requires the findlib package *)