language, GHCextensions, GHC
As with all known Haskell systems, GHC implements some extensions to
the language. To use them, you'll need to give a
-fglasgow-exts option option.
Virtually all of the Glasgow extensions serve to give you access to
the underlying facilities with which we implement Haskell. Thus, you
can get at the Raw Iron, if you are willing to write some non-standard
code at a more primitive level. You need not be “stuck” on
performance because of the implementation costs of Haskell's
“high-level” features—you can always code “under” them. In an extreme case, you can write all your time-critical code in C, and then just glue it together with Haskell!
Before you get too carried away working at the lowest level (e.g.,
sloshing MutableByteArray#s around your
program), you may wish to check if there are libraries that provide a
“Haskellised veneer” over the features you want. The
separate libraries documentation describes all the libraries that come
with GHC.
Language optionslanguageoptionoptionslanguageextensionsoptions controlling These flags control what variation of the language are
permitted. Leaving out all of them gives you standard Haskell
98.:This simultaneously enables all of the extensions to
Haskell 98 described in , except where otherwise
noted. and :This option enables the language extension defined in the
Haskell 98 Foreign Function Interface Addendum plus deprecated
syntax of previous versions of the FFI for backwards
compatibility.: Switch off the Haskell 98 monomorphism restriction.
Independent of the
flag. See . Only relevant
if you also use .See . Only relevant if
you also use .See . Independent of
.See . Independent of
.-fno-implicit-prelude
option GHC normally imports
Prelude.hi files for you. If you'd
rather it didn't, then give it a
option. The idea is
that you can then import a Prelude of your own. (But don't
call it Prelude; the Haskell module
namespace is flat, and you must not conflict with any
Prelude module.)Even though you have not imported the Prelude, most of
the built-in syntax still refers to the built-in Haskell
Prelude types and values, as specified by the Haskell
Report. For example, the type [Int]
still means Prelude.[] Int; tuples
continue to refer to the standard Prelude tuples; the
translation for list comprehensions continues to use
Prelude.map etc.However, does
change the handling of certain built-in syntax: see .Enables Template Haskell (see ). Currently also implied by
.Enables implicit parameters (see ). Currently also implied by
.Unboxed types and primitive operationsGHC is built on a raft of primitive data types and operations.
While you really can use this stuff to write fast code,
we generally find it a lot less painful, and more satisfying in the
long run, to use higher-level language features and libraries. With
any luck, the code you write will be optimised to the efficient
unboxed version in any case. And if it isn't, we'd like to know
about it.We do not currently have good, up-to-date documentation about the
primitives, perhaps because they are mainly intended for internal use.
There used to be a long section about them here in the User Guide, but it
became out of date, and wrong information is worse than none.The Real Truth about what primitive types there are, and what operations
work over those types, is held in the file
fptools/ghc/compiler/prelude/primops.txt.
This file is used directly to generate GHC's primitive-operation definitions, so
it is always correct! It is also intended for processing into text. Indeed,
the result of such processing is part of the description of the
External
Core language.
So that document is a good place to look for a type-set version.
We would be very happy if someone wanted to volunteer to produce an SGML
back end to the program that processes primops.txt so that
we could include the results here in the User Guide.What follows here is a brief summary of some main points.Unboxed types
Unboxed types (Glasgow extension)Most types in GHC are boxed, which means
that values of that type are represented by a pointer to a heap
object. The representation of a Haskell Int, for
example, is a two-word heap object. An unboxed
type, however, is represented by the value itself, no pointers or heap
allocation are involved.
Unboxed types correspond to the “raw machine” types you
would use in C: Int# (long int),
Double# (double), Addr#
(void *), etc. The primitive operations
(PrimOps) on these types are what you might expect; e.g.,
(+#) is addition on
Int#s, and is the machine-addition that we all
know and love—usually one instruction.
Primitive (unboxed) types cannot be defined in Haskell, and are
therefore built into the language and compiler. Primitive types are
always unlifted; that is, a value of a primitive type cannot be
bottom. We use the convention that primitive types, values, and
operations have a # suffix.
Primitive values are often represented by a simple bit-pattern, such
as Int#, Float#,
Double#. But this is not necessarily the case:
a primitive value might be represented by a pointer to a
heap-allocated object. Examples include
Array#, the type of primitive arrays. A
primitive array is heap-allocated because it is too big a value to fit
in a register, and would be too expensive to copy around; in a sense,
it is accidental that it is represented by a pointer. If a pointer
represents a primitive value, then it really does point to that value:
no unevaluated thunks, no indirections…nothing can be at the
other end of the pointer than the primitive value.
There are some restrictions on the use of primitive types, the main
one being that you can't pass a primitive value to a polymorphic
function or store one in a polymorphic data type. This rules out
things like [Int#] (i.e. lists of primitive
integers). The reason for this restriction is that polymorphic
arguments and constructor fields are assumed to be pointers: if an
unboxed integer is stored in one of these, the garbage collector would
attempt to follow it, leading to unpredictable space leaks. Or a
seq operation on the polymorphic component may
attempt to dereference the pointer, with disastrous results. Even
worse, the unboxed value might be larger than a pointer
(Double# for instance).
Nevertheless, A numerically-intensive program using unboxed types can
go a lot faster than its “standard”
counterpart—we saw a threefold speedup on one example.
Unboxed Tuples
Unboxed tuples aren't really exported by GHC.Exts,
they're available by default with . An
unboxed tuple looks like this:
(# e_1, ..., e_n #)
where e_1..e_n are expressions of any
type (primitive or non-primitive). The type of an unboxed tuple looks
the same.
Unboxed tuples are used for functions that need to return multiple
values, but they avoid the heap allocation normally associated with
using fully-fledged tuples. When an unboxed tuple is returned, the
components are put directly into registers or on the stack; the
unboxed tuple itself does not have a composite representation. Many
of the primitive operations listed in this section return unboxed
tuples.
There are some pretty stringent restrictions on the use of unboxed tuples:
Unboxed tuple types are subject to the same restrictions as
other unboxed types; i.e. they may not be stored in polymorphic data
structures or passed to polymorphic functions.
Unboxed tuples may only be constructed as the direct result of
a function, and may only be deconstructed with a case expression.
eg. the following are valid:
f x y = (# x+1, y-1 #)
g x = case f x x of { (# a, b #) -> a + b }
but the following are invalid:
f x y = g (# x, y #)
g (# x, y #) = x + y
No variable can have an unboxed tuple type. This is illegal:
f :: (# Int, Int #) -> (# Int, Int #)
f x = x
because x has an unboxed tuple type.
Note: we may relax some of these restrictions in the future.
The IO and ST monads use unboxed
tuples to avoid unnecessary allocation during sequences of operations.
Syntactic extensionsHierarchical ModulesGHC supports a small extension to the syntax of module
names: a module name is allowed to contain a dot
‘.’. This is also known as the
“hierarchical module namespace” extension, because
it extends the normally flat Haskell module namespace into a
more flexible hierarchy of modules.This extension has very little impact on the language
itself; modules names are always fully
qualified, so you can just think of the fully qualified module
name as the module name. In particular, this
means that the full module name must be given after the
module keyword at the beginning of the
module; for example, the module A.B.C must
beginmodule A.B.CIt is a common strategy to use the as
keyword to save some typing when using qualified names with
hierarchical modules. For example:
import qualified Control.Monad.ST.Strict as ST
For details on how GHC searches for source and interface
files in the presence of hierarchical modules, see .GHC comes with a large collection of libraries arranged
hierarchically; see the accompanying library documentation.
There is an ongoing project to create and maintain a stable set
of core libraries used by several Haskell
compilers, and the libraries that GHC comes with represent the
current status of that project. For more details, see Haskell
Libraries.Pattern guardsPattern guards (Glasgow extension)
The discussion that follows is an abbreviated version of Simon Peyton Jones's original proposal. (Note that the proposal was written before pattern guards were implemented, so refers to them as unimplemented.)
Suppose we have an abstract data type of finite maps, with a
lookup operation:
lookup :: FiniteMap -> Int -> Maybe Int
The lookup returns Nothing if the supplied key is not in the domain of the mapping, and (Just v) otherwise,
where v is the value that the key maps to. Now consider the following definition:
clunky env var1 var2 | ok1 && ok2 = val1 + val2
| otherwise = var1 + var2
where
m1 = lookup env var1
m2 = lookup env var2
ok1 = maybeToBool m1
ok2 = maybeToBool m2
val1 = expectJust m1
val2 = expectJust m2
The auxiliary functions are
maybeToBool :: Maybe a -> Bool
maybeToBool (Just x) = True
maybeToBool Nothing = False
expectJust :: Maybe a -> a
expectJust (Just x) = x
expectJust Nothing = error "Unexpected Nothing"
What is clunky doing? The guard ok1 &&
ok2 checks that both lookups succeed, using
maybeToBool to convert the Maybe
types to booleans. The (lazily evaluated) expectJust
calls extract the values from the results of the lookups, and binds the
returned values to val1 and val2
respectively. If either lookup fails, then clunky takes the
otherwise case and returns the sum of its arguments.
This is certainly legal Haskell, but it is a tremendously verbose and
un-obvious way to achieve the desired effect. Arguably, a more direct way
to write clunky would be to use case expressions:
clunky env var1 var1 = case lookup env var1 of
Nothing -> fail
Just val1 -> case lookup env var2 of
Nothing -> fail
Just val2 -> val1 + val2
where
fail = val1 + val2
This is a bit shorter, but hardly better. Of course, we can rewrite any set
of pattern-matching, guarded equations as case expressions; that is
precisely what the compiler does when compiling equations! The reason that
Haskell provides guarded equations is because they allow us to write down
the cases we want to consider, one at a time, independently of each other.
This structure is hidden in the case version. Two of the right-hand sides
are really the same (fail), and the whole expression
tends to become more and more indented.
Here is how I would write clunky:
clunky env var1 var1
| Just val1 <- lookup env var1
, Just val2 <- lookup env var2
= val1 + val2
...other equations for clunky...
The semantics should be clear enough. The qualifers are matched in order.
For a <- qualifier, which I call a pattern guard, the
right hand side is evaluated and matched against the pattern on the left.
If the match fails then the whole guard fails and the next equation is
tried. If it succeeds, then the appropriate binding takes place, and the
next qualifier is matched, in the augmented environment. Unlike list
comprehensions, however, the type of the expression to the right of the
<- is the same as the type of the pattern to its
left. The bindings introduced by pattern guards scope over all the
remaining guard qualifiers, and over the right hand side of the equation.
Just as with list comprehensions, boolean expressions can be freely mixed
with among the pattern guards. For example:
f x | [y] <- x
, y > 3
, Just z <- h y
= ...
Haskell's current guards therefore emerge as a special case, in which the
qualifier list has just one element, a boolean expression.
The recursive do-notation
The recursive do-notation (also known as mdo-notation) is implemented as described in
"A recursive do for Haskell",
Levent Erkok, John Launchbury",
Haskell Workshop 2002, pages: 29-37. Pittsburgh, Pennsylvania.
The do-notation of Haskell does not allow recursive bindings,
that is, the variables bound in a do-expression are visible only in the textually following
code block. Compare this to a let-expression, where bound variables are visible in the entire binding
group. It turns out that several applications can benefit from recursive bindings in
the do-notation, and this extension provides the necessary syntactic support.
Here is a simple (yet contrived) example:
import Control.Monad.Fix
justOnes = mdo xs <- Just (1:xs)
return xs
As you can guess justOnes will evaluate to Just [1,1,1,....
The Control.Monad.Fix library introduces the MonadFix class. It's definition is:
class Monad m => MonadFix m where
mfix :: (a -> m a) -> m a
The function mfix
dictates how the required recursion operation should be performed. If recursive bindings are required for a monad,
then that monad must be declared an instance of the MonadFix class.
For details, see the above mentioned reference.
The following instances of MonadFix are automatically provided: List, Maybe, IO.
Furthermore, the Control.Monad.ST and Control.Monad.ST.Lazy modules provide the instances of the MonadFix class
for Haskell's internal state monad (strict and lazy, respectively).
There are three important points in using the recursive-do notation:
The recursive version of the do-notation uses the keyword mdo (rather
than do).
You should import Control.Monad.Fix.
(Note: Strictly speaking, this import is required only when you need to refer to the name
MonadFix in your program, but the import is always safe, and the programmers
are encouraged to always import this module when using the mdo-notation.)
As with other extensions, ghc should be given the flag -fglasgow-exts
The web page: http://www.cse.ogi.edu/PacSoft/projects/rmb
contains up to date information on recursive monadic bindings.
Historical note: The old implementation of the mdo-notation (and most
of the existing documents) used the name
MonadRec for the class and the corresponding library.
This name is not supported by GHC.
Parallel List Comprehensionslist comprehensionsparallelparallel list comprehensionsParallel list comprehensions are a natural extension to list
comprehensions. List comprehensions can be thought of as a nice
syntax for writing maps and filters. Parallel comprehensions
extend this to include the zipWith family.A parallel list comprehension has multiple independent
branches of qualifier lists, each separated by a `|' symbol. For
example, the following zips together two lists:
[ (x, y) | x <- xs | y <- ys ]
The behavior of parallel list comprehensions follows that of
zip, in that the resulting list will have the same length as the
shortest branch.We can define parallel list comprehensions by translation to
regular comprehensions. Here's the basic idea:Given a parallel comprehension of the form:
[ e | p1 <- e11, p2 <- e12, ...
| q1 <- e21, q2 <- e22, ...
...
]
This will be translated to:
[ e | ((p1,p2), (q1,q2), ...) <- zipN [(p1,p2) | p1 <- e11, p2 <- e12, ...]
[(q1,q2) | q1 <- e21, q2 <- e22, ...]
...
]
where `zipN' is the appropriate zip for the given number of
branches.Rebindable syntaxGHC allows most kinds of built-in syntax to be rebound by
the user, to facilitate replacing the Prelude
with a home-grown version, for example.You may want to define your own numeric class
hierarchy. It completely defeats that purpose if the
literal "1" means "Prelude.fromInteger
1", which is what the Haskell Report specifies.
So the flag causes
the following pieces of built-in syntax to refer to
whatever is in scope, not the Prelude
versions:Integer and fractional literals mean
"fromInteger 1" and
"fromRational 3.2", not the
Prelude-qualified versions; both in expressions and in
patterns. However, the standard Prelude Eq class
is still used for the equality test necessary for literal patterns.Negation (e.g. "- (f x)")
means "negate (f x)" (not
Prelude.negate).In an n+k pattern, the standard Prelude
Ord class is still used for comparison,
but the necessary subtraction uses whatever
"(-)" is in scope (not
"Prelude.(-)")."Do" notation is translated using whatever
functions (>>=),
(>>), fail, and
return, are in scope (not the Prelude
versions). List comprehensions, and parallel array
comprehensions, are unaffected. Be warned: this is an experimental facility, with fewer checks than
usual. In particular, it is essential that the functions GHC finds in scope
must have the appropriate types, namely:
fromInteger :: forall a. (...) => Integer -> a
fromRational :: forall a. (...) => Rational -> a
negate :: forall a. (...) => a -> a
(-) :: forall a. (...) => a -> a -> a
(>>=) :: forall m a. (...) => m a -> (a -> m b) -> m b
(>>) :: forall m a. (...) => m a -> m b -> m b
return :: forall m a. (...) => a -> m a
fail :: forall m a. (...) => String -> m a
(The (...) part can be any context including the empty context; that part
is up to you.)
If the functions don't have the right type, very peculiar things may
happen. Use -dcore-lint to
typecheck the desugared program. If Core Lint is happy you should be all right.Type system extensionsData types and type synonymsData types with no constructorsWith the flag, GHC lets you declare
a data type with no constructors. For example:
data S -- S :: *
data T a -- T :: * -> *
Syntactically, the declaration lacks the "= constrs" part. The
type can be parameterised over types of any kind, but if the kind is
not * then an explicit kind annotation must be used
(see ).Such data types have only one value, namely bottom.
Nevertheless, they can be useful when defining "phantom types".Infix type constructors
GHC allows type constructors to be operators, and to be written infix, very much
like expressions. More specifically:
A type constructor can be an operator, beginning with a colon; e.g. :*:.
The lexical syntax is the same as that for data constructors.
Types can be written infix. For example Int :*: Bool.
Back-quotes work
as for expressions, both for type constructors and type variables; e.g. Int `Either` Bool, or
Int `a` Bool. Similarly, parentheses work the same; e.g. (:*:) Int Bool.
Fixities may be declared for type constructors just as for data constructors. However,
one cannot distinguish between the two in a fixity declaration; a fixity declaration
sets the fixity for a data constructor and the corresponding type constructor. For example:
infixl 7 T, :*:
sets the fixity for both type constructor T and data constructor T,
and similarly for :*:.
Int `a` Bool.
Function arrow is infixr with fixity 0. (This might change; I'm not sure what it should be.)
Data type and type-synonym declarations can be written infix. E.g.
data a :*: b = Foo a b
type a :+: b = Either a b
The only thing that differs between operators in types and operators in expressions is that
ordinary non-constructor operators, such as + and *
are not allowed in types. Reason: the uniform thing to do would be to make them type
variables, but that's not very useful. A less uniform but more useful thing would be to
allow them to be type constructors. But that gives trouble in export
lists. So for now we just exclude them.
Liberalised type synonyms
Type synonmys are like macros at the type level, and
GHC does validity checking on types only after expanding type synonyms.
That means that GHC can be very much more liberal about type synonyms than Haskell 98:
You can write a forall (including overloading)
in a type synonym, thus:
type Discard a = forall b. Show b => a -> b -> (a, String)
f :: Discard a
f x y = (x, show y)
g :: Discard Int -> (Int,Bool) -- A rank-2 type
g f = f Int True
You can write an unboxed tuple in a type synonym:
type Pr = (# Int, Int #)
h :: Int -> Pr
h x = (# x, x #)
You can apply a type synonym to a forall type:
type Foo a = a -> a -> Bool
f :: Foo (forall b. b->b)
After expanding the synonym, f has the legal (in GHC) type:
f :: (forall b. b->b) -> (forall b. b->b) -> Bool
You can apply a type synonym to a partially applied type synonym:
type Generic i o = forall x. i x -> o x
type Id x = x
foo :: Generic Id []
After epxanding the synonym, foo has the legal (in GHC) type:
foo :: forall x. x -> [x]
GHC currently does kind checking before expanding synonyms (though even that
could be changed.)
After expanding type synonyms, GHC does validity checking on types, looking for
the following mal-formedness which isn't detected simply by kind checking:
Type constructor applied to a type involving for-alls.
Unboxed tuple on left of an arrow.
Partially-applied type synonym.
So, for example,
this will be rejected:
type Pr = (# Int, Int #)
h :: Pr -> Int
h x = ...
because GHC does not allow unboxed tuples on the left of a function arrow.
Existentially quantified data constructors
The idea of using existential quantification in data type declarations
was suggested by Laufer (I believe, thought doubtless someone will
correct me), and implemented in Hope+. It's been in Lennart
Augustsson's hbc Haskell compiler for several years, and
proved very useful. Here's the idea. Consider the declaration:
data Foo = forall a. MkFoo a (a -> Bool)
| Nil
The data type Foo has two constructors with types:
MkFoo :: forall a. a -> (a -> Bool) -> Foo
Nil :: Foo
Notice that the type variable a in the type of MkFoo
does not appear in the data type itself, which is plain Foo.
For example, the following expression is fine:
[MkFoo 3 even, MkFoo 'c' isUpper] :: [Foo]
Here, (MkFoo 3 even) packages an integer with a function
even that maps an integer to Bool; and MkFoo 'c'
isUpper packages a character with a compatible function. These
two things are each of type Foo and can be put in a list.
What can we do with a value of type Foo?. In particular,
what happens when we pattern-match on MkFoo?
f (MkFoo val fn) = ???
Since all we know about val and fn is that they
are compatible, the only (useful) thing we can do with them is to
apply fn to val to get a boolean. For example:
f :: Foo -> Bool
f (MkFoo val fn) = fn val
What this allows us to do is to package heterogenous values
together with a bunch of functions that manipulate them, and then treat
that collection of packages in a uniform manner. You can express
quite a bit of object-oriented-like programming this way.
Why existential?
What has this to do with existential quantification?
Simply that MkFoo has the (nearly) isomorphic type
MkFoo :: (exists a . (a, a -> Bool)) -> Foo
But Haskell programmers can safely think of the ordinary
universally quantified type given above, thereby avoiding
adding a new existential quantification construct.
Type classes
An easy extension (implemented in hbc) is to allow
arbitrary contexts before the constructor. For example:
data Baz = forall a. Eq a => Baz1 a a
| forall b. Show b => Baz2 b (b -> b)
The two constructors have the types you'd expect:
Baz1 :: forall a. Eq a => a -> a -> Baz
Baz2 :: forall b. Show b => b -> (b -> b) -> Baz
But when pattern matching on Baz1 the matched values can be compared
for equality, and when pattern matching on Baz2 the first matched
value can be converted to a string (as well as applying the function to it).
So this program is legal:
f :: Baz -> String
f (Baz1 p q) | p == q = "Yes"
| otherwise = "No"
f (Baz2 v fn) = show (fn v)
Operationally, in a dictionary-passing implementation, the
constructors Baz1 and Baz2 must store the
dictionaries for Eq and Show respectively, and
extract it on pattern matching.
Notice the way that the syntax fits smoothly with that used for
universal quantification earlier.
Restrictions
There are several restrictions on the ways in which existentially-quantified
constructors can be use.
When pattern matching, each pattern match introduces a new,
distinct, type for each existential type variable. These types cannot
be unified with any other type, nor can they escape from the scope of
the pattern match. For example, these fragments are incorrect:
f1 (MkFoo a f) = a
Here, the type bound by MkFoo "escapes", because a
is the result of f1. One way to see why this is wrong is to
ask what type f1 has:
f1 :: Foo -> a -- Weird!
What is this "a" in the result type? Clearly we don't mean
this:
f1 :: forall a. Foo -> a -- Wrong!
The original program is just plain wrong. Here's another sort of error
f2 (Baz1 a b) (Baz1 p q) = a==q
It's ok to say a==b or p==q, but
a==q is wrong because it equates the two distinct types arising
from the two Baz1 constructors.
You can't pattern-match on an existentially quantified
constructor in a let or where group of
bindings. So this is illegal:
f3 x = a==b where { Baz1 a b = x }
Instead, use a case expression:
f3 x = case x of Baz1 a b -> a==b
In general, you can only pattern-match
on an existentially-quantified constructor in a case expression or
in the patterns of a function definition.
The reason for this restriction is really an implementation one.
Type-checking binding groups is already a nightmare without
existentials complicating the picture. Also an existential pattern
binding at the top level of a module doesn't make sense, because it's
not clear how to prevent the existentially-quantified type "escaping".
So for now, there's a simple-to-state restriction. We'll see how
annoying it is.
You can't use existential quantification for newtype
declarations. So this is illegal:
newtype T = forall a. Ord a => MkT a
Reason: a value of type T must be represented as a
pair of a dictionary for Ord t and a value of type
t. That contradicts the idea that
newtype should have no concrete representation.
You can get just the same efficiency and effect by using
data instead of newtype. If
there is no overloading involved, then there is more of a case for
allowing an existentially-quantified newtype,
because the data version does carry an
implementation cost, but single-field existentially quantified
constructors aren't much use. So the simple restriction (no
existential stuff on newtype) stands, unless there
are convincing reasons to change it.
You can't use deriving to define instances of a
data type with existentially quantified data constructors.
Reason: in most cases it would not make sense. For example:#
data T = forall a. MkT [a] deriving( Eq )
To derive Eq in the standard way we would need to have equality
between the single component of two MkT constructors:
instance Eq T where
(MkT a) == (MkT b) = ???
But a and b have distinct types, and so can't be compared.
It's just about possible to imagine examples in which the derived instance
would make sense, but it seems altogether simpler simply to prohibit such
declarations. Define your own instances!
Class declarations
This section documents GHC's implementation of multi-parameter type
classes. There's lots of background in the paper Type
classes: exploring the design space (Simon Peyton Jones, Mark
Jones, Erik Meijer).
There are the following constraints on class declarations:
Multi-parameter type classes are permitted. For example:
class Collection c a where
union :: c a -> c a -> c a
...etc.
The class hierarchy must be acyclic. However, the definition
of "acyclic" involves only the superclass relationships. For example,
this is OK:
class C a where {
op :: D b => a -> b -> b
}
class C a => D a where { ... }
Here, C is a superclass of D, but it's OK for a
class operation op of C to mention D. (It
would not be OK for D to be a superclass of C.)
There are no restrictions on the context in a class declaration
(which introduces superclasses), except that the class hierarchy must
be acyclic. So these class declarations are OK:
class Functor (m k) => FiniteMap m k where
...
class (Monad m, Monad (t m)) => Transform t m where
lift :: m a -> (t m) a
All of the class type variables must be reachable (in the sense
mentioned in )
from the free varibles of each method type
. For example:
class Coll s a where
empty :: s
insert :: s -> a -> s
is not OK, because the type of empty doesn't mention
a. This rule is a consequence of Rule 1(a), above, for
types, and has the same motivation.
Sometimes, offending class declarations exhibit misunderstandings. For
example, Coll might be rewritten
class Coll s a where
empty :: s a
insert :: s a -> a -> s a
which makes the connection between the type of a collection of
a's (namely (s a)) and the element type a.
Occasionally this really doesn't work, in which case you can split the
class like this:
class CollE s where
empty :: s
class CollE s => Coll s a where
insert :: s -> a -> s
Class method types
Haskell 98 prohibits class method types to mention constraints on the
class type variable, thus:
class Seq s a where
fromList :: [a] -> s a
elem :: Eq a => a -> s a -> Bool
The type of elem is illegal in Haskell 98, because it
contains the constraint Eq a, constrains only the
class type variable (in this case a).
With the GHC lifts this restriction.
Type signaturesThe context of a type signature
Unlike Haskell 98, constraints in types do not have to be of
the form (class type-variable) or
(class (type-variable type-variable ...)). Thus,
these type signatures are perfectly OK
g :: Eq [a] => ...
g :: Ord (T a ()) => ...
GHC imposes the following restrictions on the constraints in a type signature.
Consider the type:
forall tv1..tvn (c1, ...,cn) => type
(Here, we write the "foralls" explicitly, although the Haskell source
language omits them; in Haskell 98, all the free type variables of an
explicit source-language type signature are universally quantified,
except for the class type variables in a class declaration. However,
in GHC, you can give the foralls if you want. See ).
Each universally quantified type variable
tvi must be reachable from type.
A type variable is "reachable" if it it is functionally dependent
(see )
on the type variables free in type.
The reason for this is that a value with a type that does not obey
this restriction could not be used without introducing
ambiguity.
Here, for example, is an illegal type:
forall a. Eq a => Int
When a value with this type was used, the constraint Eq tv
would be introduced where tv is a fresh type variable, and
(in the dictionary-translation implementation) the value would be
applied to a dictionary for Eq tv. The difficulty is that we
can never know which instance of Eq to use because we never
get any more information about tv.
Every constraint ci must mention at least one of the
universally quantified type variables tvi.
For example, this type is OK because C a b mentions the
universally quantified type variable b:
forall a. C a b => burble
The next type is illegal because the constraint Eq b does not
mention a:
forall a. Eq b => burble
The reason for this restriction is milder than the other one. The
excluded types are never useful or necessary (because the offending
context doesn't need to be witnessed at this point; it can be floated
out). Furthermore, floating them out increases sharing. Lastly,
excluding them is a conservative choice; it leaves a patch of
territory free in case we need it later.
For-all hoisting
It is often convenient to use generalised type synonyms (see ) at the right hand
end of an arrow, thus:
type Discard a = forall b. a -> b -> a
g :: Int -> Discard Int
g x y z = x+y
Simply expanding the type synonym would give
g :: Int -> (forall b. Int -> b -> Int)
but GHC "hoists" the forall to give the isomorphic type
g :: forall b. Int -> Int -> b -> Int
In general, the rule is this: to determine the type specified by any explicit
user-written type (e.g. in a type signature), GHC expands type synonyms and then repeatedly
performs the transformation:type1 -> forall a1..an. context2 => type2
==>
forall a1..an. context2 => type1 -> type2
(In fact, GHC tries to retain as much synonym information as possible for use in
error messages, but that is a usability issue.) This rule applies, of course, whether
or not the forall comes from a synonym. For example, here is another
valid way to write g's type signature:
g :: Int -> Int -> forall b. b -> Int
When doing this hoisting operation, GHC eliminates duplicate constraints. For
example:
type Foo a = (?x::Int) => Bool -> a
g :: Foo (Foo Int)
means
g :: (?x::Int) => Bool -> Bool -> Int
Instance declarationsOverlapping instances
In general, instance declarations may not overlap. The two instance
declarations
instance context1 => C type1 where ...
instance context2 => C type2 where ...
"overlap" if type1 and type2 unify.
However, if you give the command line option
-fallow-overlapping-instances
option then overlapping instance declarations are permitted.
However, GHC arranges never to commit to using an instance declaration
if another instance declaration also applies, either now or later.
EITHER type1 and type2 do not unify
OR type2 is a substitution instance of type1
(but not identical to type1), or vice versa.
Notice that these rules
make it clear which instance decl to use
(pick the most specific one that matches)
do not mention the contexts context1, context2
Reason: you can pick which instance decl
"matches" based on the type.
However the rules are over-conservative. Two instance declarations can overlap,
but it can still be clear in particular situations which to use. For example:
instance C (Int,a) where ...
instance C (a,Bool) where ...
These are rejected by GHC's rules, but it is clear what to do when trying
to solve the constraint C (Int,Int) because the second instance
cannot apply. Yell if this restriction bites you.
GHC is also conservative about committing to an overlapping instance. For example:
class C a where { op :: a -> a }
instance C [Int] where ...
instance C a => C [a] where ...
f :: C b => [b] -> [b]
f x = op x
From the RHS of f we get the constraint C [b]. But
GHC does not commit to the second instance declaration, because in a paricular
call of f, b might be instantiate to Int, so the first instance declaration
would be appropriate. So GHC rejects the program. If you add
GHC will instead silently pick the second instance, without complaining about
the problem of subsequent instantiations.
Regrettably, GHC doesn't guarantee to detect overlapping instance
declarations if they appear in different modules. GHC can "see" the
instance declarations in the transitive closure of all the modules
imported by the one being compiled, so it can "see" all instance decls
when it is compiling Main. However, it currently chooses not
to look at ones that can't possibly be of use in the module currently
being compiled, in the interests of efficiency. (Perhaps we should
change that decision, at least for Main.)
Type synonyms in the instance headUnlike Haskell 98, instance heads may use type
synonyms. (The instance "head" is the bit after the "=>" in an instance decl.)
As always, using a type synonym is just shorthand for
writing the RHS of the type synonym definition. For example:
type Point = (Int,Int)
instance C Point where ...
instance C [Point] where ...
is legal. However, if you added
instance C (Int,Int) where ...
as well, then the compiler will complain about the overlapping
(actually, identical) instance declarations. As always, type synonyms
must be fully applied. You cannot, for example, write:
type P a = [[a]]
instance Monad P where ...
This design decision is independent of all the others, and easily
reversed, but it makes sense to me.
Undecidable instancesAn instance declaration must normally obey the following rules:
At least one of the types in the head of
an instance declaration must not be a type variable.
For example, these are OK:
instance C Int a where ...
instance D (Int, Int) where ...
instance E [[a]] where ...
but this is not:
instance F a where ...
Note that instance heads may contain repeated type variables.
For example, this is OK:
instance Stateful (ST s) (MutVar s) where ...
All of the types in the context of
an instance declaration must be type variables.
Thus
instance C a b => Eq (a,b) where ...
is OK, but
instance C Int b => Foo b where ...
is not OK.
These restrictions ensure that
context reduction terminates: each reduction step removes one type
constructor. For example, the following would make the type checker
loop if it wasn't excluded:
instance C a => C a where ...
There are two situations in which the rule is a bit of a pain. First,
if one allows overlapping instance declarations then it's quite
convenient to have a "default instance" declaration that applies if
something more specific does not:
instance C a where
op = ... -- Default
Second, sometimes you might want to use the following to get the
effect of a "class synonym":
class (C1 a, C2 a, C3 a) => C a where { }
instance (C1 a, C2 a, C3 a) => C a where { }
This allows you to write shorter signatures:
f :: C a => ...
instead of
f :: (C1 a, C2 a, C3 a) => ...
Voluminous correspondence on the Haskell mailing list has convinced me
that it's worth experimenting with more liberal rules. If you use
the experimental flag
-fallow-undecidable-instances
option, you can use arbitrary
types in both an instance context and instance head. Termination is ensured by having a
fixed-depth recursion stack. If you exceed the stack depth you get a
sort of backtrace, and the opportunity to increase the stack depth
with N.
I'm on the lookout for a less brutal solution: a simple rule that preserves decidability while
allowing these idioms interesting idioms.
Implicit parameters Implicit paramters are implemented as described in
"Implicit parameters: dynamic scoping with static types",
J Lewis, MB Shields, E Meijer, J Launchbury,
27th ACM Symposium on Principles of Programming Languages (POPL'00),
Boston, Jan 2000.
(Most of the following, stil rather incomplete, documentation is
due to Jeff Lewis.)Implicit parameter support is enabled with the option
.
A variable is called dynamically bound when it is bound by the calling
context of a function and statically bound when bound by the callee's
context. In Haskell, all variables are statically bound. Dynamic
binding of variables is a notion that goes back to Lisp, but was later
discarded in more modern incarnations, such as Scheme. Dynamic binding
can be very confusing in an untyped language, and unfortunately, typed
languages, in particular Hindley-Milner typed languages like Haskell,
only support static scoping of variables.
However, by a simple extension to the type class system of Haskell, we
can support dynamic binding. Basically, we express the use of a
dynamically bound variable as a constraint on the type. These
constraints lead to types of the form (?x::t') => t, which says "this
function uses a dynamically-bound variable ?x
of type t'". For
example, the following expresses the type of a sort function,
implicitly parameterized by a comparison function named cmp.
sort :: (?cmp :: a -> a -> Bool) => [a] -> [a]
The dynamic binding constraints are just a new form of predicate in the type class system.
An implicit parameter occurs in an expression using the special form ?x,
where x is
any valid identifier (e.g. ord ?x is a valid expression).
Use of this construct also introduces a new
dynamic-binding constraint in the type of the expression.
For example, the following definition
shows how we can define an implicitly parameterized sort function in
terms of an explicitly parameterized sortBy function:
sortBy :: (a -> a -> Bool) -> [a] -> [a]
sort :: (?cmp :: a -> a -> Bool) => [a] -> [a]
sort = sortBy ?cmp
Implicit-parameter type constraints
Dynamic binding constraints behave just like other type class
constraints in that they are automatically propagated. Thus, when a
function is used, its implicit parameters are inherited by the
function that called it. For example, our sort function might be used
to pick out the least value in a list:
least :: (?cmp :: a -> a -> Bool) => [a] -> a
least xs = fst (sort xs)
Without lifting a finger, the ?cmp parameter is
propagated to become a parameter of least as well. With explicit
parameters, the default is that parameters must always be explicit
propagated. With implicit parameters, the default is to always
propagate them.
An implicit-parameter type constraint differs from other type class constraints in the
following way: All uses of a particular implicit parameter must have
the same type. This means that the type of (?x, ?x)
is (?x::a) => (a,a), and not
(?x::a, ?x::b) => (a, b), as would be the case for type
class constraints.
You can't have an implicit parameter in the context of a class or instance
declaration. For example, both these declarations are illegal:
class (?x::Int) => C a where ...
instance (?x::a) => Foo [a] where ...
Reason: exactly which implicit parameter you pick up depends on exactly where
you invoke a function. But the ``invocation'' of instance declarations is done
behind the scenes by the compiler, so it's hard to figure out exactly where it is done.
Easiest thing is to outlaw the offending types.
Implicit-parameter constraints do not cause ambiguity. For example, consider:
f :: (?x :: [a]) => Int -> Int
f n = n + length ?x
g :: (Read a, Show a) => String -> String
g s = show (read s)
Here, g has an ambiguous type, and is rejected, but f
is fine. The binding for ?x at f's call site is
quite unambiguous, and fixes the type a.
Implicit-parameter bindings
An implicit parameter is bound using the standard
let or where binding forms.
For example, we define the min function by binding
cmp.
min :: [a] -> a
min = let ?cmp = (<=) in least
A group of implicit-parameter bindings may occur anywhere a normal group of Haskell
bindings can occur, except at top level. That is, they can occur in a let
(including in a list comprehension, or do-notation, or pattern guards),
or a where clause.
Note the following points:
An implicit-parameter binding group must be a
collection of simple bindings to implicit-style variables (no
function-style bindings, and no type signatures); these bindings are
neither polymorphic or recursive.
You may not mix implicit-parameter bindings with ordinary bindings in a
single let
expression; use two nested lets instead.
(In the case of where you are stuck, since you can't nest where clauses.)
You may put multiple implicit-parameter bindings in a
single binding group; but they are not treated
as a mutually recursive group (as ordinary let bindings are).
Instead they are treated as a non-recursive group, simultaneously binding all the implicit
parameter. The bindings are not nested, and may be re-ordered without changing
the meaning of the program.
For example, consider:
f t = let { ?x = t; ?y = ?x+(1::Int) } in ?x + ?y
The use of ?x in the binding for ?y does not "see"
the binding for ?x, so the type of f is
f :: (?x::Int) => Int -> Int
Linear implicit parameters
Linear implicit parameters are an idea developed by Koen Claessen,
Mark Shields, and Simon PJ. They address the long-standing
problem that monads seem over-kill for certain sorts of problem, notably:
distributing a supply of unique names distributing a suppply of random numbers distributing an oracle (as in QuickCheck)
Linear implicit parameters are just like ordinary implicit parameters,
except that they are "linear" -- that is, they cannot be copied, and
must be explicitly "split" instead. Linear implicit parameters are
written '%x' instead of '?x'.
(The '/' in the '%' suggests the split!)
For example:
import GHC.Exts( Splittable )
data NameSupply = ...
splitNS :: NameSupply -> (NameSupply, NameSupply)
newName :: NameSupply -> Name
instance Splittable NameSupply where
split = splitNS
f :: (%ns :: NameSupply) => Env -> Expr -> Expr
f env (Lam x e) = Lam x' (f env e)
where
x' = newName %ns
env' = extend env x x'
...more equations for f...
Notice that the implicit parameter %ns is consumed
once by the call to newName once by the recursive call to f
So the translation done by the type checker makes
the parameter explicit:
f :: NameSupply -> Env -> Expr -> Expr
f ns env (Lam x e) = Lam x' (f ns1 env e)
where
(ns1,ns2) = splitNS ns
x' = newName ns2
env = extend env x x'
Notice the call to 'split' introduced by the type checker.
How did it know to use 'splitNS'? Because what it really did
was to introduce a call to the overloaded function 'split',
defined by the class Splittable:
class Splittable a where
split :: a -> (a,a)
The instance for Splittable NameSupply tells GHC how to implement
split for name supplies. But we can simply write
g x = (x, %ns, %ns)
and GHC will infer
g :: (Splittable a, %ns :: a) => b -> (b,a,a)
The Splittable class is built into GHC. It's exported by module
GHC.Exts.
Other points:
'?x' and '%x'
are entirely distinct implicit parameters: you
can use them together and they won't intefere with each other. You can bind linear implicit parameters in 'with' clauses. You cannot have implicit parameters (whether linear or not)
in the context of a class or instance declaration. Warnings
The monomorphism restriction is even more important than usual.
Consider the example above:
f :: (%ns :: NameSupply) => Env -> Expr -> Expr
f env (Lam x e) = Lam x' (f env e)
where
x' = newName %ns
env' = extend env x x'
If we replaced the two occurrences of x' by (newName %ns), which is
usually a harmless thing to do, we get:
f :: (%ns :: NameSupply) => Env -> Expr -> Expr
f env (Lam x e) = Lam (newName %ns) (f env e)
where
env' = extend env x (newName %ns)
But now the name supply is consumed in three places
(the two calls to newName,and the recursive call to f), so
the result is utterly different. Urk! We don't even have
the beta rule.
Well, this is an experimental change. With implicit
parameters we have already lost beta reduction anyway, and
(as John Launchbury puts it) we can't sensibly reason about
Haskell programs without knowing their typing.
Recursive functionsLinear implicit parameters can be particularly tricky when you have a recursive function
Consider
foo :: %x::T => Int -> [Int]
foo 0 = []
foo n = %x : foo (n-1)
where T is some type in class Splittable.
Do you get a list of all the same T's or all different T's
(assuming that split gives two distinct T's back)?
If you supply the type signature, taking advantage of polymorphic
recursion, you get what you'd probably expect. Here's the
translated term, where the implicit param is made explicit:
foo x 0 = []
foo x n = let (x1,x2) = split x
in x1 : foo x2 (n-1)
But if you don't supply a type signature, GHC uses the Hindley
Milner trick of using a single monomorphic instance of the function
for the recursive calls. That is what makes Hindley Milner type inference
work. So the translation becomes
foo x = let
foom 0 = []
foom n = x : foom (n-1)
in
foom
Result: 'x' is not split, and you get a list of identical T's. So the
semantics of the program depends on whether or not foo has a type signature.
Yikes!
You may say that this is a good reason to dislike linear implicit parameters
and you'd be right. That is why they are an experimental feature.
Functional dependencies
Functional dependencies are implemented as described by Mark Jones
in “Type Classes with Functional Dependencies”, Mark P. Jones,
In Proceedings of the 9th European Symposium on Programming,
ESOP 2000, Berlin, Germany, March 2000, Springer-Verlag LNCS 1782,
.
Functional dependencies are introduced by a vertical bar in the syntax of a
class declaration; e.g.
class (Monad m) => MonadState s m | m -> s where ...
class Foo a b c | a b -> c where ...
There should be more documentation, but there isn't (yet). Yell if you need it.
Explicitly-kinded quantification
Haskell infers the kind of each type variable. Sometimes it is nice to be able
to give the kind explicitly as (machine-checked) documentation,
just as it is nice to give a type signature for a function. On some occasions,
it is essential to do so. For example, in his paper "Restricted Data Types in Haskell" (Haskell Workshop 1999)
John Hughes had to define the data type:
data Set cxt a = Set [a]
| Unused (cxt a -> ())
The only use for the Unused constructor was to force the correct
kind for the type variable cxt.
GHC now instead allows you to specify the kind of a type variable directly, wherever
a type variable is explicitly bound. Namely:
data declarations:
data Set (cxt :: * -> *) a = Set [a]
type declarations:
type T (f :: * -> *) = f Int
class declarations:
class (Eq a) => C (f :: * -> *) a where ...
forall's in type signatures:
f :: forall (cxt :: * -> *). Set cxt Int
The parentheses are required. Some of the spaces are required too, to
separate the lexemes. If you write (f::*->*) you
will get a parse error, because "::*->*" is a
single lexeme in Haskell.
As part of the same extension, you can put kind annotations in types
as well. Thus:
f :: (Int :: *) -> Int
g :: forall a. a -> (a :: *)
The syntax is
atype ::= '(' ctype '::' kind ')
The parentheses are required.
Arbitrary-rank polymorphism
Haskell type signatures are implicitly quantified. The new keyword forall
allows us to say exactly what this means. For example:
g :: b -> b
means this:
g :: forall b. (b -> b)
The two are treated identically.
However, GHC's type system supports arbitrary-rank
explicit universal quantification in
types.
For example, all the following types are legal:
f1 :: forall a b. a -> b -> a
g1 :: forall a b. (Ord a, Eq b) => a -> b -> a
f2 :: (forall a. a->a) -> Int -> Int
g2 :: (forall a. Eq a => [a] -> a -> Bool) -> Int -> Int
f3 :: ((forall a. a->a) -> Int) -> Bool -> Bool
Here, f1 and g1 are rank-1 types, and
can be written in standard Haskell (e.g. f1 :: a->b->a).
The forall makes explicit the universal quantification that
is implicitly added by Haskell.
The functions f2 and g2 have rank-2 types;
the forall is on the left of a function arrrow. As g2
shows, the polymorphic type on the left of the function arrow can be overloaded.
The function f3 has a rank-3 type;
it has rank-2 types on the left of a function arrow.
GHC allows types of arbitrary rank; you can nest foralls
arbitrarily deep in function arrows. (GHC used to be restricted to rank 2, but
that restriction has now been lifted.)
In particular, a forall-type (also called a "type scheme"),
including an operational type class context, is legal:
On the left of a function arrow On the right of a function arrow (see ) As the argument of a constructor, or type of a field, in a data type declaration. For
example, any of the f1,f2,f3,g1,g2 above would be valid
field type signatures. As the type of an implicit parameter In a pattern type signature (see )
There is one place you cannot put a forall:
you cannot instantiate a type variable with a forall-type. So you cannot
make a forall-type the argument of a type constructor. So these types are illegal:
x1 :: [forall a. a->a]
x2 :: (forall a. a->a, Int)
x3 :: Maybe (forall a. a->a)
Of course forall becomes a keyword; you can't use forall as
a type variable any more!
Examples
In a data or newtype declaration one can quantify
the types of the constructor arguments. Here are several examples:
data T a = T1 (forall b. b -> b -> b) a
data MonadT m = MkMonad { return :: forall a. a -> m a,
bind :: forall a b. m a -> (a -> m b) -> m b
}
newtype Swizzle = MkSwizzle (Ord a => [a] -> [a])
The constructors have rank-2 types:
T1 :: forall a. (forall b. b -> b -> b) -> a -> T a
MkMonad :: forall m. (forall a. a -> m a)
-> (forall a b. m a -> (a -> m b) -> m b)
-> MonadT m
MkSwizzle :: (Ord a => [a] -> [a]) -> Swizzle
Notice that you don't need to use a forall if there's an
explicit context. For example in the first argument of the
constructor MkSwizzle, an implicit "forall a." is
prefixed to the argument type. The implicit forall
quantifies all type variables that are not already in scope, and are
mentioned in the type quantified over.
As for type signatures, implicit quantification happens for non-overloaded
types too. So if you write this:
data T a = MkT (Either a b) (b -> b)
it's just as if you had written this:
data T a = MkT (forall b. Either a b) (forall b. b -> b)
That is, since the type variable b isn't in scope, it's
implicitly universally quantified. (Arguably, it would be better
to require explicit quantification on constructor arguments
where that is what is wanted. Feedback welcomed.)
You construct values of types T1, MonadT, Swizzle by applying
the constructor to suitable values, just as usual. For example,
a1 :: T Int
a1 = T1 (\xy->x) 3
a2, a3 :: Swizzle
a2 = MkSwizzle sort
a3 = MkSwizzle reverse
a4 :: MonadT Maybe
a4 = let r x = Just x
b m k = case m of
Just y -> k y
Nothing -> Nothing
in
MkMonad r b
mkTs :: (forall b. b -> b -> b) -> a -> [T a]
mkTs f x y = [T1 f x, T1 f y]
The type of the argument can, as usual, be more general than the type
required, as (MkSwizzle reverse) shows. (reverse
does not need the Ord constraint.)
When you use pattern matching, the bound variables may now have
polymorphic types. For example:
f :: T a -> a -> (a, Char)
f (T1 w k) x = (w k x, w 'c' 'd')
g :: (Ord a, Ord b) => Swizzle -> [a] -> (a -> b) -> [b]
g (MkSwizzle s) xs f = s (map f (s xs))
h :: MonadT m -> [m a] -> m [a]
h m [] = return m []
h m (x:xs) = bind m x $ \y ->
bind m (h m xs) $ \ys ->
return m (y:ys)
In the function h we use the record selectors return
and bind to extract the polymorphic bind and return functions
from the MonadT data structure, rather than using pattern
matching.
Type inference
In general, type inference for arbitrary-rank types is undecideable.
GHC uses an algorithm proposed by Odersky and Laufer ("Putting type annotations to work", POPL'96)
to get a decidable algorithm by requiring some help from the programmer.
We do not yet have a formal specification of "some help" but the rule is this:
For a lambda-bound or case-bound variable, x, either the programmer
provides an explicit polymorphic type for x, or GHC's type inference will assume
that x's type has no foralls in it.
What does it mean to "provide" an explicit type for x? You can do that by
giving a type signature for x directly, using a pattern type signature
(), thus:
\ f :: (forall a. a->a) -> (f True, f 'c')
Alternatively, you can give a type signature to the enclosing
context, which GHC can "push down" to find the type for the variable:
(\ f -> (f True, f 'c')) :: (forall a. a->a) -> (Bool,Char)
Here the type signature on the expression can be pushed inwards
to give a type signature for f. Similarly, and more commonly,
one can give a type signature for the function itself:
h :: (forall a. a->a) -> (Bool,Char)
h f = (f True, f 'c')
You don't need to give a type signature if the lambda bound variable
is a constructor argument. Here is an example we saw earlier:
f :: T a -> a -> (a, Char)
f (T1 w k) x = (w k x, w 'c' 'd')
Here we do not need to give a type signature to w, because
it is an argument of constructor T1 and that tells GHC all
it needs to know.
Implicit quantification
GHC performs implicit quantification as follows. At the top level (only) of
user-written types, if and only if there is no explicit forall,
GHC finds all the type variables mentioned in the type that are not already
in scope, and universally quantifies them. For example, the following pairs are
equivalent:
f :: a -> a
f :: forall a. a -> a
g (x::a) = let
h :: a -> b -> b
h x y = y
in ...
g (x::a) = let
h :: forall b. a -> b -> b
h x y = y
in ...
Notice that GHC does not find the innermost possible quantification
point. For example:
f :: (a -> a) -> Int
-- MEANS
f :: forall a. (a -> a) -> Int
-- NOT
f :: (forall a. a -> a) -> Int
g :: (Ord a => a -> a) -> Int
-- MEANS the illegal type
g :: forall a. (Ord a => a -> a) -> Int
-- NOT
g :: (forall a. Ord a => a -> a) -> Int
The latter produces an illegal type, which you might think is silly,
but at least the rule is simple. If you want the latter type, you
can write your for-alls explicitly. Indeed, doing so is strongly advised
for rank-2 types.
Scoped type variables
A pattern type signature can introduce a scoped type
variable. For example
f (xs::[a]) = ys ++ ys
where
ys :: [a]
ys = reverse xs
The pattern (xs::[a]) includes a type signature for xs.
This brings the type variable a into scope; it scopes over
all the patterns and right hand sides for this equation for f.
In particular, it is in scope at the type signature for y.
Pattern type signatures are completely orthogonal to ordinary, separate
type signatures. The two can be used independently or together.
At ordinary type signatures, such as that for ys, any type variables
mentioned in the type signature that are not in scope are
implicitly universally quantified. (If there are no type variables in
scope, all type variables mentioned in the signature are universally
quantified, which is just as in Haskell 98.) In this case, since a
is in scope, it is not universally quantified, so the type of ys is
the same as that of xs. In Haskell 98 it is not possible to declare
a type for ys; a major benefit of scoped type variables is that
it becomes possible to do so.
Scoped type variables are implemented in both GHC and Hugs. Where the
implementations differ from the specification below, those differences
are noted.
So much for the basic idea. Here are the details.
What a pattern type signature means
A type variable brought into scope by a pattern type signature is simply
the name for a type. The restriction they express is that all occurrences
of the same name mean the same type. For example:
f :: [Int] -> Int -> Int
f (xs::[a]) (y::a) = (head xs + y) :: a
The pattern type signatures on the left hand side of
f express the fact that xs
must be a list of things of some type a; and that y
must have this same type. The type signature on the expression (head xs)
specifies that this expression must have the same type a.
There is no requirement that the type named by "a" is
in fact a type variable. Indeed, in this case, the type named by "a" is
Int. (This is a slight liberalisation from the original rather complex
rules, which specified that a pattern-bound type variable should be universally quantified.)
For example, all of these are legal:
t (x::a) (y::a) = x+y*2
f (x::a) (y::b) = [x,y] -- a unifies with b
g (x::a) = x + 1::Int -- a unifies with Int
h x = let k (y::a) = [x,y] -- a is free in the
in k x -- environment
k (x::a) True = ... -- a unifies with Int
k (x::Int) False = ...
w :: [b] -> [b]
w (x::a) = x -- a unifies with [b]
Scope and implicit quantification
All the type variables mentioned in a pattern,
that are not already in scope,
are brought into scope by the pattern. We describe this set as
the type variables bound by the pattern.
For example:
f (x::a) = let g (y::(a,b)) = fst y
in
g (x,True)
The pattern (x::a) brings the type variable
a into scope, as well as the term
variable x. The pattern (y::(a,b))
contains an occurrence of the already-in-scope type variable a,
and brings into scope the type variable b.
The type variable(s) bound by the pattern have the same scope
as the term variable(s) bound by the pattern. For example:
let
f (x::a) = <...rhs of f...>
(p::b, q::b) = (1,2)
in <...body of let...>
Here, the type variable a scopes over the right hand side of f,
just like x does; while the type variable b scopes over the
body of the let, and all the other definitions in the let,
just like p and q do.
Indeed, the newly bound type variables also scope over any ordinary, separate
type signatures in the let group.
The type variables bound by the pattern may be
mentioned in ordinary type signatures or pattern
type signatures anywhere within their scope.
In ordinary type signatures, any type variable mentioned in the
signature that is in scope is not universally quantified.
Ordinary type signatures do not bring any new type variables
into scope (except in the type signature itself!). So this is illegal:
f :: a -> a
f x = x::a
It's illegal because a is not in scope in the body of f,
so the ordinary signature x::a is equivalent to x::forall a.a;
and that is an incorrect typing.
The pattern type signature is a monotype:
A pattern type signature cannot contain any explicit forall quantification.
The type variables bound by a pattern type signature can only be instantiated to monotypes,
not to type schemes.
There is no implicit universal quantification on pattern type signatures (in contrast to
ordinary type signatures).
The type variables in the head of a class or instance declaration
scope over the methods defined in the where part. For example:
class C a where
op :: [a] -> a
op xs = let ys::[a]
ys = reverse xs
in
head ys
(Not implemented in Hugs yet, Dec 98).
Where a pattern type signature can occur
A pattern type signature can occur in any pattern. For example:
A pattern type signature can be on an arbitrary sub-pattern, not
ust on a variable:
f ((x,y)::(a,b)) = (y,x) :: (b,a)
Pattern type signatures, including the result part, can be used
in lambda abstractions:
(\ (x::a, y) :: a -> x)
Pattern type signatures, including the result part, can be used
in case expressions:
case e of { (x::a, y) :: a -> x }
To avoid ambiguity, the type after the “::” in a result
pattern signature on a lambda or case must be atomic (i.e. a single
token or a parenthesised type of some sort). To see why,
consider how one would parse this:
\ x :: a -> b -> x
Pattern type signatures can bind existential type variables.
For example:
data T = forall a. MkT [a]
f :: T -> T
f (MkT [t::a]) = MkT t3
where
t3::[a] = [t,t,t]
Pattern type signatures
can be used in pattern bindings:
f x = let (y, z::a) = x in ...
f1 x = let (y, z::Int) = x in ...
f2 (x::(Int,a)) = let (y, z::a) = x in ...
f3 :: (b->b) = \x -> x
In all such cases, the binding is not generalised over the pattern-bound
type variables. Thus f3 is monomorphic; f3
has type b -> b for some type b,
and notforall b. b -> b.
In contrast, the binding
f4 :: b->b
f4 = \x -> x
makes a polymorphic function, but b is not in scope anywhere
in f4's scope.
Result type signatures
The result type of a function can be given a signature, thus:
f (x::a) :: [a] = [x,x,x]
The final :: [a] after all the patterns gives a signature to the
result type. Sometimes this is the only way of naming the type variable
you want:
f :: Int -> [a] -> [a]
f n :: ([a] -> [a]) = let g (x::a, y::a) = (y,x)
in \xs -> map g (reverse xs `zip` xs)
The type variables bound in a result type signature scope over the right hand side
of the definition. However, consider this corner-case:
rev1 :: [a] -> [a] = \xs -> reverse xs
foo ys = rev (ys::[a])
The signature on rev1 is considered a pattern type signature, not a result
type signature, and the type variables it binds have the same scope as rev1
itself (i.e. the right-hand side of rev1 and the rest of the module too).
In particular, the expression (ys::[a]) is OK, because the type variable a
is in scope (otherwise it would mean (ys::forall a.[a]), which would be rejected).
As mentioned above, rev1 is made monomorphic by this scoping rule.
For example, the following program would be rejected, because it claims that rev1
is polymorphic:
rev1 :: [b] -> [b]
rev1 :: [a] -> [a] = \xs -> reverse xs
Result type signatures are not yet implemented in Hugs.
Deriving clause for classes Typeable and Data
Haskell 98 allows the programmer to add "deriving( Eq, Ord )" to a data type
declaration, to generate a standard instance declaration for classes specified in the deriving clause.
In Haskell 98, the only classes that may appear in the deriving clause are the standard
classes Eq, Ord,
Enum, Ix, Bounded, Read, and Show.
GHC extends this list with two more classes that may be automatically derived
(provided the flag is specified):
Typeable, and Data. These classes are defined in the library
modules Data.Dynamic and Data.Generics respectively, and the
appropriate class must be in scope before it can be mentioned in the deriving clause.
Generalised derived instances for newtypes
When you define an abstract type using newtype, you may want
the new type to inherit some instances from its representation. In
Haskell 98, you can inherit instances of Eq, Ord,
Enum and Bounded by deriving them, but for any
other classes you have to write an explicit instance declaration. For
example, if you define
newtype Dollars = Dollars Int
and you want to use arithmetic on Dollars, you have to
explicitly define an instance of Num:
instance Num Dollars where
Dollars a + Dollars b = Dollars (a+b)
...
All the instance does is apply and remove the newtype
constructor. It is particularly galling that, since the constructor
doesn't appear at run-time, this instance declaration defines a
dictionary which is wholly equivalent to the Int
dictionary, only slower!
Generalising the deriving clause
GHC now permits such instances to be derived instead, so one can write
newtype Dollars = Dollars Int deriving (Eq,Show,Num)
and the implementation uses the sameNum dictionary
for Dollars as for Int. Notionally, the compiler
derives an instance declaration of the form
instance Num Int => Num Dollars
which just adds or removes the newtype constructor according to the type.
We can also derive instances of constructor classes in a similar
way. For example, suppose we have implemented state and failure monad
transformers, such that
instance Monad m => Monad (State s m)
instance Monad m => Monad (Failure m)
In Haskell 98, we can define a parsing monad by
type Parser tok m a = State [tok] (Failure m) a
which is automatically a monad thanks to the instance declarations
above. With the extension, we can make the parser type abstract,
without needing to write an instance of class Monad, via
newtype Parser tok m a = Parser (State [tok] (Failure m) a)
deriving Monad
In this case the derived instance declaration is of the form
instance Monad (State [tok] (Failure m)) => Monad (Parser tok m)
Notice that, since Monad is a constructor class, the
instance is a partial application of the new type, not the
entire left hand side. We can imagine that the type declaration is
``eta-converted'' to generate the context of the instance
declaration.
We can even derive instances of multi-parameter classes, provided the
newtype is the last class parameter. In this case, a ``partial
application'' of the class appears in the deriving
clause. For example, given the class
class StateMonad s m | m -> s where ...
instance Monad m => StateMonad s (State s m) where ...
then we can derive an instance of StateMonad for Parsers by
newtype Parser tok m a = Parser (State [tok] (Failure m) a)
deriving (Monad, StateMonad [tok])
The derived instance is obtained by completing the application of the
class to the new type:
instance StateMonad [tok] (State [tok] (Failure m)) =>
StateMonad [tok] (Parser tok m)
As a result of this extension, all derived instances in newtype
declarations are treated uniformly (and implemented just by reusing
the dictionary for the representation type), exceptShow and Read, which really behave differently for
the newtype and its representation.
A more precise specification
Derived instance declarations are constructed as follows. Consider the
declaration (after expansion of any type synonyms)
newtype T v1...vn = T' (S t1...tk vk+1...vn) deriving (c1...cm)
where
S is a type constructor,
The t1...tk are types,
The vk+1...vn are type variables which do not occur in any of
the ti, and
The ci are partial applications of
classes of the form C t1'...tj', where the arity of C
is exactly j+1. That is, C lacks exactly one type argument.
None of the ci is Read, Show,
Typeable, or Data. These classes
should not "look through" the type or its constructor. You can still
derive these classes for a newtype, but it happens in the usual way, not
via this new mechanism.
Then, for each ci, the derived instance
declaration is:
instance ci (S t1...tk vk+1...v) => ci (T v1...vp)
where p is chosen so that T v1...vp is of the
right kind for the last parameter of class Ci.
As an example which does not work, consider
newtype NonMonad m s = NonMonad (State s m s) deriving Monad
Here we cannot derive the instance
instance Monad (State s m) => Monad (NonMonad m)
because the type variable s occurs in State s m,
and so cannot be "eta-converted" away. It is a good thing that this
deriving clause is rejected, because NonMonad m is
not, in fact, a monad --- for the same reason. Try defining
>>= with the correct type: you won't be able to.
Notice also that the order of class parameters becomes
important, since we can only derive instances for the last one. If the
StateMonad class above were instead defined as
class StateMonad m s | m -> s where ...
then we would not have been able to derive an instance for the
Parser type above. We hypothesise that multi-parameter
classes usually have one "main" parameter for which deriving new
instances is most interesting.
Template HaskellTemplate Haskell allows you to do compile-time meta-programming in Haskell. There is a "home page" for
Template Haskell at
http://www.haskell.org/th/, while
the background to
the main technical innovations is discussed in "
Template Meta-programming for Haskell" (Proc Haskell Workshop 2002).
The first example from that paper is set out below as a worked example to help get you started.
The documentation here describes the realisation in GHC. (It's rather sketchy just now;
Tim Sheard is going to expand it.)
Syntax Template Haskell has the following new syntactic
constructions. You need to use the flag
to switch these syntactic extensions on
( is currently implied by
, but you are encouraged to
specify it explicitly).
A splice is written $x, where x is an
identifier, or $(...), where the "..." is an arbitrary expression.
There must be no space between the "$" and the identifier or parenthesis. This use
of "$" overrides its meaning as an infix operator, just as "M.x" overrides the meaning
of "." as an infix operator. If you want the infix operator, put spaces around it.
A splice can occur in place of
an expression; the spliced expression must have type Expr a list of top-level declarations; ; the spliced expression must have type Q [Dec] a type; the spliced expression must have type Type.
(Note that the syntax for a declaration splice uses "$" not "splice" as in
the paper. Also the type of the enclosed expression must be Q [Dec], not [Q Dec]
as in the paper.)
A expression quotation is written in Oxford brackets, thus:
[| ... |], where the "..." is an expression;
the quotation has type Expr.[d| ... |], where the "..." is a list of top-level declarations;
the quotation has type Q [Dec].[t| ... |], where the "..." is a type;
the quotation has type Type.
Reification is written thus:
reifyDecl T, where T is a type constructor; this expression
has type Dec. reifyDecl C, where C is a class; has type Dec.reifyType f, where f is an identifier; has type Typ. Still to come: fixities Using Template Haskell
The data types and monadic constructor functions for Template Haskell are in the library
Language.Haskell.THSyntax.
You can only run a function at compile time if it is imported from another module. That is,
you can't define a function in a module, and call it from within a splice in the same module.
(It would make sense to do so, but it's hard to implement.)
The flag -ddump-splices shows the expansion of all top-level splices as they happen.
If you are building GHC from source, you need at least a stage-2 bootstrap compiler to
run Template Haskell. A stage-1 compiler will reject the TH constructs. Reason: TH
compiles and runs a program, and then looks at the result. So it's important that
the program it compiles produces results whose representations are identical to
those of the compiler itself.
Template Haskell works in any mode (--make, --interactive,
or file-at-a-time). There used to be a restriction to the former two, but that restriction
has been lifted.
A Template Haskell Worked Example To help you get over the confidence barrier, try out this skeletal worked example.
First cut and paste the two modules below into "Main.hs" and "Printf.hs":
{- Main.hs -}
module Main where
-- Import our template "pr"
import Printf ( pr )
-- The splice operator $ takes the Haskell source code
-- generated at compile time by "pr" and splices it into
-- the argument of "putStrLn".
main = putStrLn ( $(pr "Hello") )
{- Printf.hs -}
module Printf where
-- Skeletal printf from the paper.
-- It needs to be in a separate module to the one where
-- you intend to use it.
-- Import some Template Haskell syntax
import Language.Haskell.THSyntax
-- Describe a format string
data Format = D | S | L String
-- Parse a format string. This is left largely to you
-- as we are here interested in building our first ever
-- Template Haskell program and not in building printf.
parse :: String -> [Format]
parse s = [ L s ]
-- Generate Haskell source code from a parsed representation
-- of the format string. This code will be spliced into
-- the module which calls "pr", at compile time.
gen :: [Format] -> Expr
gen [D] = [| \n -> show n |]
gen [S] = [| \s -> s |]
gen [L s] = string s
-- Here we generate the Haskell code for the splice
-- from an input format string.
pr :: String -> Expr
pr s = gen (parse s)
Now run the compiler (here we are a Cygwin prompt on Windows):
$ ghc --make -fth main.hs -o main.exe
Run "main.exe" and here is your output:
$ ./main
Hello
Arrow notation
Arrows are a generalization of monads introduced by John Hughes.
For more details, see
“Generalising Monads to Arrows”,
John Hughes, in Science of Computer Programming 37,
pp67–111, May 2000.
“A New Notation for Arrows”,
Ross Paterson, in ICFP, Sep 2001.
“Arrows and Computation”,
Ross Paterson, in The Fun of Programming,
Palgrave, 2003.
and the arrows web page at
http://www.haskell.org/arrows/.
With the flag, GHC supports the arrow
notation described in the second of these papers.
What follows is a brief introduction to the notation;
it won't make much sense unless you've read Hughes's paper.
This notation is translated to ordinary Haskell,
using combinators from the
Control.Arrow
module.
The extension adds a new kind of expression for defining arrows,
of the form proc pat -> cmd,
where proc is a new keyword.
The variables of the pattern are bound in the body of the
proc-expression,
which is a new sort of thing called a command.
The syntax of commands is as follows:
cmd ::= exp1 -< exp2
| exp1 -<< exp2
| do { cstmt1 .. cstmtn ; cmd }
| let decls in cmd
| if exp then cmd1 else cmd2
| case exp of { calts }
| cmd1 qop cmd2
| (| aexp cmd1 .. cmdn |)
| \ pat1 .. patn -> cmd
| cmd aexp
| ( cmd )
cstmt ::= let decls
| pat <- cmd
| rec { cstmt1 .. cstmtn }
| cmd
Commands produce values, but (like monadic computations)
may yield more than one value,
or none, and may do other things as well.
For the most part, familiarity with monadic notation is a good guide to
using commands.
However the values of expressions, even monadic ones,
are determined by the values of the variables they contain;
this is not necessarily the case for commands.
A simple example of the new notation is the expression
proc x -> f -< x+1
We call this a procedure or
arrow abstraction.
As with a lambda expression, the variable x
is a new variable bound within the proc-expression.
It refers to the input to the arrow.
In the above example, -< is not an identifier but an
new reserved symbol used for building commands from an expression of arrow
type and an expression to be fed as input to that arrow.
(The weird look will make more sense later.)
It may be read as analogue of application for arrows.
The above example is equivalent to the Haskell expression
arr (\ x -> x+1) >>> f
That would make no sense if the expression to the left of
-< involves the bound variable x.
More generally, the expression to the left of -<
may not involve any local variable,
i.e. a variable bound in the current arrow abstraction.
For such a situation there is a variant -<<, as in
proc x -> f x -<< x+1
which is equivalent to
arr (\ x -> (f, x+1)) >>> app
so in this case the arrow must belong to the ArrowApply
class.
Such an arrow is equivalent to a monad, so if you're using this form
you may find a monadic formulation more convenient.
do-notation for commands
Another form of command is a form of do-notation.
For example, you can write
proc x -> do
y <- f -< x+1
g -< 2*y
let z = x+y
t <- h -< x*z
returnA -< t+z
You can read this much like ordinary do-notation,
but with commands in place of monadic expressions.
The first line sends the value of x+1 as an input to
the arrow f, and matches its output against
y.
In the next line, the output is discarded.
The arrow returnA is defined in the
Control.Arrow
module as arr id.
The above example is treated as an abbreviation for
arr (\ x -> (x, x)) >>>
first (arr (\ x -> x+1) >>> f) >>>
arr (\ (y, x) -> (y, (x, y))) >>>
first (arr (\ y -> 2*y) >>> g) >>>
arr snd >>>
arr (\ (x, y) -> let z = x+y in ((x, z), z)) >>>
first (arr (\ (x, z) -> x*z) >>> h) >>>
arr (\ (t, z) -> t+z) >>>
returnA
Note that variables not used later in the composition are projected out.
After simplification using rewrite rules (see )
defined in the
Control.Arrow
module, this reduces to
arr (\ x -> (x+1, x)) >>>
first f >>>
arr (\ (y, x) -> (2*y, (x, y))) >>>
first g >>>
arr (\ (_, (x, y)) -> let z = x+y in (x*z, z)) >>>
first h >>>
arr (\ (t, z) -> t+z)
which is what you might have written by hand.
With arrow notation, GHC keeps track of all those tuples of variables for you.
Note that although the above translation suggests that
let-bound variables like z must be
monomorphic, the actual translation produces Core,
so polymorphic variables are allowed.
It's also possible to have mutually recursive bindings,
using the new rec keyword, as in the following example:
counter :: ArrowCircuit a => a Bool Int
counter = proc reset -> do
rec output <- returnA -< if reset then 0 else next
next <- delay 0 -< output+1
returnA -< output
The translation of such forms uses the loop combinator,
so the arrow concerned must belong to the ArrowLoop class.
Conditional commands
In the previous example, we used a conditional expression to construct the
input for an arrow.
Sometimes we want to conditionally execute different commands, as in
proc (x,y) ->
if f x y
then g -< x+1
else h -< y+2
which is translated to
arr (\ (x,y) -> if f x y then Left x else Right y) >>>
(arr (\x -> x+1) >>> f) ||| (arr (\y -> y+2) >>> g)
Since the translation uses |||,
the arrow concerned must belong to the ArrowChoice class.
There are also case commands, like
case input of
[] -> f -< ()
[x] -> g -< x+1
x1:x2:xs -> do
y <- h -< (x1, x2)
ys <- k -< xs
returnA -< y:ys
The syntax is the same as for case expressions,
except that the bodies of the alternatives are commands rather than expressions.
The translation is similar to that of if commands.
Defining your own control structures
As we're seen, arrow notation provides constructs,
modelled on those for expressions,
for sequencing, value recursion and conditionals.
But suitable combinators,
which you can define in ordinary Haskell,
may also be used to build new commands out of existing ones.
The basic idea is that a command defines an arrow from environments to values.
These environments assign values to the free local variables of the command.
Thus combinators that produce arrows from arrows
may also be used to build commands from commands.
For example, the ArrowChoice class includes a combinator
ArrowChoice a => (<+>) :: a e c -> a e c -> a e c
so we can use it to build commands:
expr' = proc x ->
returnA -< x
<+> do
symbol Plus -< ()
y <- term -< ()
expr' -< x + y
<+> do
symbol Minus -< ()
y <- term -< ()
expr' -< x - y
This is equivalent to
expr' = (proc x -> returnA -< x)
<+> (proc x -> do
symbol Plus -< ()
y <- term -< ()
expr' -< x + y)
<+> (proc x -> do
symbol Minus -< ()
y <- term -< ()
expr' -< x - y)
It is essential that this operator be polymorphic in e
(representing the environment input to the command
and thence to its subcommands)
and satisfy the corresponding naturality property
arr k >>> (f <+> g) = (arr k >>> f) <+> (arr k >>> g)
at least for strict k.
(This should be automatic if you're not using seq.)
This ensures that environments seen by the subcommands are environments
of the whole command,
and also allows the translation to safely trim these environments.
The operator must also not use any variable defined within the current
arrow abstraction.
We could define our own operator
untilA :: ArrowChoice a => a e () -> a e Bool -> a e ()
untilA body cond = proc x ->
if cond x then returnA -< ()
else do
body -< x
untilA body cond -< x
and use it in the same way.
Of course this infix syntax only makes sense for binary operators;
there is also a more general syntax involving special brackets:
proc x -> do
y <- f -< x+1
(|untilA (increment -< x+y) (within 0.5 -< x)|)
Primitive constructs
Some operators will need to pass additional inputs to their subcommands.
For example, in an arrow type supporting exceptions,
the operator that attaches an exception handler will wish to pass the
exception that occurred to the handler.
Such an operator might have a type
handleA :: ... => a e c -> a (e,Ex) c -> a e c
where Ex is the type of exceptions handled.
You could then use this with arrow notation by writing a command
body `handleA` \ ex -> handler
so that if an exception is raised in the command body,
the variable ex is bound to the value of the exception
and the command handler,
which typically refers to ex, is entered.
Though the syntax here looks like a functional lambda,
we are talking about commands, and something different is going on.
The input to the arrow represented by a command consists of values for
the free local variables in the command, plus a stack of anonymous values.
In all the prior examples, this stack was empty.
In the second argument to handleA,
this stack consists of one value, the value of the exception.
The command form of lambda merely gives this value a name.
More concretely,
the values on the stack are paired to the right of the environment.
So when designing operators like handleA that pass
extra inputs to their subcommands,
More precisely, the type of each argument of the operator (and its result)
should have the form
a (...(e,t1), ... tn) t
where e is a polymorphic variable
(representing the environment)
and ti are the types of the values on the stack,
with t1 being the top.
The polymorphic variable e must not occur in
a, ti or
t.
However the arrows involved need not be the same.
Here are some more examples of suitable operators:
bracketA :: ... => a e b -> a (e,b) c -> a (e,c) d -> a e d
runReader :: ... => a e c -> a' (e,State) c
runState :: ... => a e c -> a' (e,State) (c,State)
We can supply the extra input required by commands built with the last two
by applying them to ordinary expressions, as in
proc x -> do
s <- ...
(|runReader (do { ... })|) s
which adds s to the stack of inputs to the command
built using runReader.
The command versions of lambda abstraction and application are analogous to
the expression versions.
In particular, the beta and eta rules describe equivalences of commands.
These three features (operators, lambda abstraction and application)
are the core of the notation; everything else can be built using them,
though the results would be somewhat clumsy.
For example, we could simulate do-notation by defining
bind :: Arrow a => a e b -> a (e,b) c -> a e c
u `bind` f = returnA &&& u >>> f
bind_ :: Arrow a => a e b -> a e c -> a e c
u `bind_` f = u `bind` (arr fst >>> f)
We could simulate do by defining
cond :: ArrowChoice a => a e b -> a e b -> a (e,Bool) b
cond f g = arr (\ (e,b) -> if b then Left e else Right e) >>> f ||| g
Differences with the paperInstead of a single form of arrow application (arrow tail) with two
translations, the implementation provides two forms
-< (first-order)
and -<< (higher-order).
User-defined operators are flagged with banana brackets instead of
a new form keyword.
Portability
Although only GHC implements arrow notation directly,
there is also a preprocessor
(available from the
arrows web page)
that translates arrow notation into Haskell 98
for use with other Haskell systems.
You would still want to check arrow programs with GHC;
tracing type errors in the preprocessor output is not easy.
Modules intended for both GHC and the preprocessor must observe some
additional restrictions:
The module must import
Control.Arrow.
The preprocessor cannot cope with other Haskell extensions.
These would have to go in separate modules.
Because the preprocessor targets Haskell (rather than Core),
let-bound variables are monomorphic.
Assertions
Assertions
If you want to make use of assertions in your standard Haskell code, you
could define a function like the following:
assert :: Bool -> a -> a
assert False x = error "assertion failed!"
assert _ x = x
which works, but gives you back a less than useful error message --
an assertion failed, but which and where?
One way out is to define an extended assert function which also
takes a descriptive string to include in the error message and
perhaps combine this with the use of a pre-processor which inserts
the source location where assert was used.
Ghc offers a helping hand here, doing all of this for you. For every
use of assert in the user's source:
kelvinToC :: Double -> Double
kelvinToC k = assert (k >= 0.0) (k+273.15)
Ghc will rewrite this to also include the source location where the
assertion was made,
assert pred val ==> assertError "Main.hs|15" pred val
The rewrite is only performed by the compiler when it spots
applications of Control.Exception.assert, so you
can still define and use your own versions of
assert, should you so wish. If not, import
Control.Exception to make use
assert in your code.
To have the compiler ignore uses of assert, use the compiler option
. -fignore-asserts
option That is, expressions of the form
assert pred e will be rewritten to
e.
Assertion failures can be caught, see the documentation for the
Control.Exception library for the details.
PragmaspragmaGHC supports several pragmas, or instructions to the
compiler placed in the source code. Pragmas don't normally affect
the meaning of the program, but they might affect the efficiency
of the generated code.Pragmas all take the form
{-# word ... #-}
where word indicates the type of
pragma, and is followed optionally by information specific to that
type of pragma. Case is ignored in
word. The various values for
word that GHC understands are described
in the following sections; any pragma encountered with an
unrecognised word is (silently)
ignored.DEPRECATED pragmaDEPRECATEDThe DEPRECATED pragma lets you specify that a particular
function, class, or type, is deprecated. There are two
forms.You can deprecate an entire module thus:
module Wibble {-# DEPRECATED "Use Wobble instead" #-} where
...
When you compile any module that import
Wibble, GHC will print the specified
message.You can deprecate a function, class, or type, with the
following top-level declaration:
{-# DEPRECATED f, C, T "Don't use these" #-}
When you compile any module that imports and uses any
of the specifed entities, GHC will print the specified
message.You can suppress the warnings with the flag
.INLINE and NOINLINE pragmasThese pragmas control the inlining of function
definitions.INLINE pragmaINLINEGHC (with , as always) tries to
inline (or “unfold”) functions/values that are
“small enough,” thus avoiding the call overhead
and possibly exposing other more-wonderful optimisations.
Normally, if GHC decides a function is “too
expensive” to inline, it will not do so, nor will it
export that unfolding for other modules to use.The sledgehammer you can bring to bear is the
INLINEINLINE
pragma pragma, used thusly:
key_function :: Int -> String -> (Bool, Double)
#ifdef __GLASGOW_HASKELL__
{-# INLINE key_function #-}
#endif
(You don't need to do the C pre-processor carry-on
unless you're going to stick the code through HBC—it
doesn't like INLINE pragmas.)The major effect of an INLINE pragma
is to declare a function's “cost” to be very low.
The normal unfolding machinery will then be very keen to
inline it.Syntactially, an INLINE pragma for a
function can be put anywhere its type signature could be
put.INLINE pragmas are a particularly
good idea for the
then/return (or
bind/unit) functions in
a monad. For example, in GHC's own
UniqueSupply monad code, we have:
#ifdef __GLASGOW_HASKELL__
{-# INLINE thenUs #-}
{-# INLINE returnUs #-}
#endif
See also the NOINLINE pragma ().NOINLINE pragmaNOINLINENOTINLINEThe NOINLINE pragma does exactly what
you'd expect: it stops the named function from being inlined
by the compiler. You shouldn't ever need to do this, unless
you're very cautious about code size.NOTINLINE is a synonym for
NOINLINE (NOTINLINE is
specified by Haskell 98 as the standard way to disable
inlining, so it should be used if you want your code to be
portable).Phase control Sometimes you want to control exactly when in GHC's
pipeline the INLINE pragma is switched on. Inlining happens
only during runs of the simplifier. Each
run of the simplifier has a different phase
number; the phase number decreases towards zero.
If you use you'll see the
sequence of phase numbers for successive runs of the
simpifier. In an INLINE pragma you can optionally specify a
phase number, thus:You can say "inline f in Phase 2
and all subsequent phases":
{-# INLINE [2] f #-}
You can say "inline g in all
phases up to, but not including, Phase 3":
{-# INLINE [~3] g #-}
If you omit the phase indicator, you mean "inline in
all phases".You can use a phase number on a NOINLINE pragma too:You can say "do not inline f
until Phase 2; in Phase 2 and subsequently behave as if
there was no pragma at all":
{-# NOINLINE [2] f #-}
You can say "do not inline g in
Phase 3 or any subsequent phase; before that, behave as if
there was no pragma":
{-# NOINLINE [~3] g #-}
If you omit the phase indicator, you mean "never
inline this function".The same phase-numbering control is available for RULES
().LINE pragmaLINEpragmapragmaLINEThis pragma is similar to C's #line
pragma, and is mainly for use in automatically generated Haskell
code. It lets you specify the line number and filename of the
original code; for example
{-# LINE 42 "Foo.vhs" #-}
if you'd generated the current file from something called
Foo.vhs and this line corresponds to line
42 in the original. GHC will adjust its error messages to refer
to the line/file named in the LINE
pragma.OPTIONS pragmaOPTIONSpragmaOPTIONSThe OPTIONS pragma is used to specify
additional options that are given to the compiler when compiling
this source file. See for
details.RULES pragmaThe RULES pragma lets you specify rewrite rules. It is
described in .SPECIALIZE pragmaSPECIALIZE pragmapragma, SPECIALIZEoverloading, death to(UK spelling also accepted.) For key overloaded
functions, you can create extra versions (NB: more code space)
specialised to particular types. Thus, if you have an
overloaded function:
hammeredLookup :: Ord key => [(key, value)] -> key -> value
If it is heavily used on lists with
Widget keys, you could specialise it as
follows:
{-# SPECIALIZE hammeredLookup :: [(Widget, value)] -> Widget -> value #-}
A SPECIALIZE pragma for a function can
be put anywhere its type signature could be put.A SPECIALIZE has the effect of generating (a) a specialised
version of the function and (b) a rewrite rule (see ) that
rewrites a call to the un-specialised function into a call to the specialised
one. You can, instead, provide your own specialised function and your own rewrite rule.
For example, suppose that:
genericLookup :: Ord a => Table a b -> a -> b
intLookup :: Table Int b -> Int -> b
where intLookup is an implementation of genericLookup
that works very fast for keys of type Int. Then you can write the rule
{-# RULES "intLookup" genericLookup = intLookup #-}
(see ). It is Your
Responsibility to make sure that
intLookup really behaves as a specialised
version of genericLookup!!!An example in which using RULES for
specialisation will Win Big:
toDouble :: Real a => a -> Double
toDouble = fromRational . toRational
{-# RULES "toDouble/Int" toDouble = i2d #-}
i2d (I# i) = D# (int2Double# i) -- uses Glasgow prim-op directly
The i2d function is virtually one machine
instruction; the default conversion—via an intermediate
Rational—is obscenely expensive by
comparison.SPECIALIZE instance pragma
SPECIALIZE pragmaoverloading, death to
Same idea, except for instance declarations. For example:
instance (Eq a) => Eq (Foo a) where {
{-# SPECIALIZE instance Eq (Foo [(Int, Bar)]) #-}
... usual stuff ...
}
The pragma must occur inside the where part
of the instance declaration.
Compatible with HBC, by the way, except perhaps in the placement
of the pragma.
UNPACK pragmaUNPACKThe UNPACK indicates to the compiler
that it should unpack the contents of a constructor field into
the constructor itself, removing a level of indirection. For
example:
data T = T {-# UNPACK #-} !Float
{-# UNPACK #-} !Float
will create a constructor T containing
two unboxed floats. This may not always be an optimisation: if
the T constructor is scrutinised and the
floats passed to a non-strict function for example, they will
have to be reboxed (this is done automatically by the
compiler).Unpacking constructor fields should only be used in
conjunction with , in order to expose
unfoldings to the compiler so the reboxing can be removed as
often as possible. For example:
f :: T -> Float
f (T f1 f2) = f1 + f2
The compiler will avoid reboxing f1
and f2 by inlining +
on floats, but only when is on.Any single-constructor data is eligible for unpacking; for
example
data T = T {-# UNPACK #-} !(Int,Int)
will store the two Ints directly in the
T constructor, by flattening the pair.
Multi-level unpacking is also supported:
data T = T {-# UNPACK #-} !S
data S = S {-# UNPACK #-} !Int {-# UNPACK #-} !Int
will store two unboxed Int#s
directly in the T constructor. The
unpacker can see through newtypes, too.If a field cannot be unpacked, you will not get a warning,
so it might be an idea to check the generated code with
.See also the flag,
which essentially has the effect of adding
{-# UNPACK #-} to every strict
constructor field.Rewrite rules
RULES pagmapragma, RULESrewrite rules
The programmer can specify rewrite rules as part of the source program
(in a pragma). GHC applies these rewrite rules wherever it can, provided (a)
the flag () is on,
and (b) the flag
() is not specified.
Here is an example:
{-# RULES
"map/map" forall f g xs. map f (map g xs) = map (f.g) xs
#-}
Syntax
From a syntactic point of view:
There may be zero or more rules in a RULES pragma.
Each rule has a name, enclosed in double quotes. The name itself has
no significance at all. It is only used when reporting how many times the rule fired.
A rule may optionally have a phase-control number (see ),
immediately after the name of the rule. Thus:
{-# RULES
"map/map" [2] forall f g xs. map f (map g xs) = map (f.g) xs
#-}
The "[2]" means that the rule is active in Phase 2 and subsequent phases. The inverse
notation "[~2]" is also accepted, meaning that the rule is active up to, but not including,
Phase 2.
Layout applies in a RULES pragma. Currently no new indentation level
is set, so you must lay out your rules starting in the same column as the
enclosing definitions.
Each variable mentioned in a rule must either be in scope (e.g. map),
or bound by the forall (e.g. f, g, xs). The variables bound by
the forall are called the pattern variables. They are separated
by spaces, just like in a type forall.
A pattern variable may optionally have a type signature.
If the type of the pattern variable is polymorphic, it must have a type signature.
For example, here is the foldr/build rule:
"fold/build" forall k z (g::forall b. (a->b->b) -> b -> b) .
foldr k z (build g) = g k z
Since g has a polymorphic type, it must have a type signature.
The left hand side of a rule must consist of a top-level variable applied
to arbitrary expressions. For example, this is not OK:
"wrong1" forall e1 e2. case True of { True -> e1; False -> e2 } = e1
"wrong2" forall f. f True = True
In "wrong1", the LHS is not an application; in "wrong2", the LHS has a pattern variable
in the head.
A rule does not need to be in the same module as (any of) the
variables it mentions, though of course they need to be in scope.
Rules are automatically exported from a module, just as instance declarations are.
Semantics
From a semantic point of view:
Rules are only applied if you use the flag.
Rules are regarded as left-to-right rewrite rules.
When GHC finds an expression that is a substitution instance of the LHS
of a rule, it replaces the expression by the (appropriately-substituted) RHS.
By "a substitution instance" we mean that the LHS can be made equal to the
expression by substituting for the pattern variables.
The LHS and RHS of a rule are typechecked, and must have the
same type.
GHC makes absolutely no attempt to verify that the LHS and RHS
of a rule have the same meaning. That is undecideable in general, and
infeasible in most interesting cases. The responsibility is entirely the programmer's!
GHC makes no attempt to make sure that the rules are confluent or
terminating. For example:
"loop" forall x,y. f x y = f y x
This rule will cause the compiler to go into an infinite loop.
If more than one rule matches a call, GHC will choose one arbitrarily to apply.
GHC currently uses a very simple, syntactic, matching algorithm
for matching a rule LHS with an expression. It seeks a substitution
which makes the LHS and expression syntactically equal modulo alpha
conversion. The pattern (rule), but not the expression, is eta-expanded if
necessary. (Eta-expanding the epression can lead to laziness bugs.)
But not beta conversion (that's called higher-order matching).
Matching is carried out on GHC's intermediate language, which includes
type abstractions and applications. So a rule only matches if the
types match too. See below.
GHC keeps trying to apply the rules as it optimises the program.
For example, consider:
let s = map f
t = map g
in
s (t xs)
The expression s (t xs) does not match the rule "map/map", but GHC
will substitute for s and t, giving an expression which does match.
If s or t was (a) used more than once, and (b) large or a redex, then it would
not be substituted, and the rule would not fire.
In the earlier phases of compilation, GHC inlines nothing
that appears on the LHS of a rule, because once you have substituted
for something you can't match against it (given the simple minded
matching). So if you write the rule
"map/map" forall f,g. map f . map g = map (f.g)
this won't match the expression map f (map g xs).
It will only match something written with explicit use of ".".
Well, not quite. It will match the expression
wibble f g xs
where wibble is defined:
wibble f g = map f . map g
because wibble will be inlined (it's small).
Later on in compilation, GHC starts inlining even things on the
LHS of rules, but still leaves the rules enabled. This inlining
policy is controlled by the per-simplification-pass flag n.
All rules are implicitly exported from the module, and are therefore
in force in any module that imports the module that defined the rule, directly
or indirectly. (That is, if A imports B, which imports C, then C's rules are
in force when compiling A.) The situation is very similar to that for instance
declarations.
List fusion
The RULES mechanism is used to implement fusion (deforestation) of common list functions.
If a "good consumer" consumes an intermediate list constructed by a "good producer", the
intermediate list should be eliminated entirely.
The following are good producers:
List comprehensions
Enumerations of Int and Char (e.g. ['a'..'z']).
Explicit lists (e.g. [True, False])
The cons constructor (e.g 3:4:[])
++mapfilteriterate, repeatzip, zipWith
The following are good consumers:
List comprehensions
array (on its second argument)
length++ (on its first argument)
foldrmapfilterconcatunzip, unzip2, unzip3, unzip4zip, zipWith (but on one argument only; if both are good producers, zip
will fuse with one but not the other)
partitionheadand, or, any, allsequence_msumsortBy
So, for example, the following should generate no intermediate lists:
array (1,10) [(i,i*i) | i <- map (+ 1) [0..9]]
This list could readily be extended; if there are Prelude functions that you use
a lot which are not included, please tell us.
If you want to write your own good consumers or producers, look at the
Prelude definitions of the above functions to see how to do so.
Specialisation
Rewrite rules can be used to get the same effect as a feature
present in earlier version of GHC:
{-# SPECIALIZE fromIntegral :: Int8 -> Int16 = int8ToInt16 #-}
This told GHC to use int8ToInt16 instead of fromIntegral whenever
the latter was called with type Int8 -> Int16. That is, rather than
specialising the original definition of fromIntegral the programmer is
promising that it is safe to use int8ToInt16 instead.
This feature is no longer in GHC. But rewrite rules let you do the
same thing:
{-# RULES
"fromIntegral/Int8/Int16" fromIntegral = int8ToInt16
#-}
This slightly odd-looking rule instructs GHC to replace fromIntegral
by int8ToInt16whenever the types match. Speaking more operationally,
GHC adds the type and dictionary applications to get the typed rule
forall (d1::Integral Int8) (d2::Num Int16) .
fromIntegral Int8 Int16 d1 d2 = int8ToInt16
What is more,
this rule does not need to be in the same file as fromIntegral,
unlike the SPECIALISE pragmas which currently do (so that they
have an original definition available to specialise).
Controlling what's going on
Use to see what transformation rules GHC is using.
Use to see what rules are being fired.
If you add you get a more detailed listing.
The defintion of (say) build in GHC/Base.lhs looks llike this:
build :: forall a. (forall b. (a -> b -> b) -> b -> b) -> [a]
{-# INLINE build #-}
build g = g (:) []
Notice the INLINE! That prevents (:) from being inlined when compiling
PrelBase, so that an importing module will “see” the (:), and can
match it on the LHS of a rule. INLINE prevents any inlining happening
in the RHS of the INLINE thing. I regret the delicacy of this.
In libraries/base/GHC/Base.lhs look at the rules for map to
see how to write rules that will do fusion and yet give an efficient
program even if fusion doesn't happen. More rules in GHC/List.lhs.
CORE pragmaCORE pragmapragma, COREcore, annotation
The external core format supports Note annotations;
the CORE pragma gives a way to specify what these
should be in your Haskell source code. Syntactically, core
annotations are attached to expressions and take a Haskell string
literal as an argument. The following function definition shows an
example:
f x = ({-# CORE "foo" #-} show) ({-# CORE "bar" #-} x)
Sematically, this is equivalent to:
g x = show x
However, when external for is generated (via
), there will be Notes attached to the
expressions show and x.
The core function declaration for f is:
f :: %forall a . GHCziShow.ZCTShow a ->
a -> GHCziBase.ZMZN GHCziBase.Char =
\ @ a (zddShow::GHCziShow.ZCTShow a) (eta::a) ->
(%note "foo"
%case zddShow %of (tpl::GHCziShow.ZCTShow a)
{GHCziShow.ZCDShow
(tpl1::GHCziBase.Int ->
a ->
GHCziBase.ZMZN GHCziBase.Char -> GHCziBase.ZMZN GHCziBase.Cha
r)
(tpl2::a -> GHCziBase.ZMZN GHCziBase.Char)
(tpl3::GHCziBase.ZMZN a ->
GHCziBase.ZMZN GHCziBase.Char -> GHCziBase.ZMZN GHCziBase.Cha
r) ->
tpl2})
(%note "foo"
eta);
Here, we can see that the function show (which
has been expanded out to a case expression over the Show dictionary)
has a %note attached to it, as does the
expression eta (which used to be called
x).
Generic classes(Note: support for generic classes is currently broken in
GHC 5.02).
The ideas behind this extension are described in detail in "Derivable type classes",
Ralf Hinze and Simon Peyton Jones, Haskell Workshop, Montreal Sept 2000, pp94-105.
An example will give the idea:
import Generics
class Bin a where
toBin :: a -> [Int]
fromBin :: [Int] -> (a, [Int])
toBin {| Unit |} Unit = []
toBin {| a :+: b |} (Inl x) = 0 : toBin x
toBin {| a :+: b |} (Inr y) = 1 : toBin y
toBin {| a :*: b |} (x :*: y) = toBin x ++ toBin y
fromBin {| Unit |} bs = (Unit, bs)
fromBin {| a :+: b |} (0:bs) = (Inl x, bs') where (x,bs') = fromBin bs
fromBin {| a :+: b |} (1:bs) = (Inr y, bs') where (y,bs') = fromBin bs
fromBin {| a :*: b |} bs = (x :*: y, bs'') where (x,bs' ) = fromBin bs
(y,bs'') = fromBin bs'
This class declaration explains how toBin and fromBin
work for arbitrary data types. They do so by giving cases for unit, product, and sum,
which are defined thus in the library module Generics:
data Unit = Unit
data a :+: b = Inl a | Inr b
data a :*: b = a :*: b
Now you can make a data type into an instance of Bin like this:
instance (Bin a, Bin b) => Bin (a,b)
instance Bin a => Bin [a]
That is, just leave off the "where" clause. Of course, you can put in the
where clause and over-ride whichever methods you please.
Using generics To use generics you need toUse the flags (to enable the extra syntax),
(to generate extra per-data-type code),
and (to make the Generics library
available. Import the module Generics from the
lang package. This import brings into
scope the data types Unit,
:*:, and :+:. (You
don't need this import if you don't mention these types
explicitly; for example, if you are simply giving instance
declarations.) Changes wrt the paper
Note that the type constructors :+: and :*:
can be written infix (indeed, you can now use
any operator starting in a colon as an infix type constructor). Also note that
the type constructors are not exactly as in the paper (Unit instead of 1, etc).
Finally, note that the syntax of the type patterns in the class declaration
uses "{|" and "|}" brackets; curly braces
alone would ambiguous when they appear on right hand sides (an extension we
anticipate wanting).
Terminology and restrictions
Terminology. A "generic default method" in a class declaration
is one that is defined using type patterns as above.
A "polymorphic default method" is a default method defined as in Haskell 98.
A "generic class declaration" is a class declaration with at least one
generic default method.
Restrictions:
Alas, we do not yet implement the stuff about constructor names and
field labels.
A generic class can have only one parameter; you can't have a generic
multi-parameter class.
A default method must be defined entirely using type patterns, or entirely
without. So this is illegal:
class Foo a where
op :: a -> (a, Bool)
op {| Unit |} Unit = (Unit, True)
op x = (x, False)
However it is perfectly OK for some methods of a generic class to have
generic default methods and others to have polymorphic default methods.
The type variable(s) in the type pattern for a generic method declaration
scope over the right hand side. So this is legal (note the use of the type variable ``p'' in a type signature on the right hand side:
class Foo a where
op :: a -> Bool
op {| p :*: q |} (x :*: y) = op (x :: p)
...
The type patterns in a generic default method must take one of the forms:
a :+: b
a :*: b
Unit
where "a" and "b" are type variables. Furthermore, all the type patterns for
a single type constructor (:*:, say) must be identical; they
must use the same type variables. So this is illegal:
class Foo a where
op :: a -> Bool
op {| a :+: b |} (Inl x) = True
op {| p :+: q |} (Inr y) = False
The type patterns must be identical, even in equations for different methods of the class.
So this too is illegal:
class Foo a where
op1 :: a -> Bool
op1 {| a :*: b |} (x :*: y) = True
op2 :: a -> Bool
op2 {| p :*: q |} (x :*: y) = False
(The reason for this restriction is that we gather all the equations for a particular type consructor
into a single generic instance declaration.)
A generic method declaration must give a case for each of the three type constructors.
The type for a generic method can be built only from:
Function arrows Type variables Tuples Arbitrary types not involving type variables
Here are some example type signatures for generic methods:
op1 :: a -> Bool
op2 :: Bool -> (a,Bool)
op3 :: [Int] -> a -> a
op4 :: [a] -> Bool
Here, op1, op2, op3 are OK, but op4 is rejected, because it has a type variable
inside a list.
This restriction is an implementation restriction: we just havn't got around to
implementing the necessary bidirectional maps over arbitrary type constructors.
It would be relatively easy to add specific type constructors, such as Maybe and list,
to the ones that are allowed.
In an instance declaration for a generic class, the idea is that the compiler
will fill in the methods for you, based on the generic templates. However it can only
do so if
The instance type is simple (a type constructor applied to type variables, as in Haskell 98).
No constructor of the instance type has unboxed fields.
(Of course, these things can only arise if you are already using GHC extensions.)
However, you can still give an instance declarations for types which break these rules,
provided you give explicit code to override any generic default methods.
The option dumps incomprehensible stuff giving details of
what the compiler does with generic declarations.
Another example
Just to finish with, here's another example I rather like:
class Tag a where
nCons :: a -> Int
nCons {| Unit |} _ = 1
nCons {| a :*: b |} _ = 1
nCons {| a :+: b |} _ = nCons (bot::a) + nCons (bot::b)
tag :: a -> Int
tag {| Unit |} _ = 1
tag {| a :*: b |} _ = 1
tag {| a :+: b |} (Inl x) = tag x
tag {| a :+: b |} (Inr y) = nCons (bot::a) + tag y