+ It's very important not to unconditionally replace a variable by
+ a non-atomic term.
+
+* We do this even if the thing isn't saturated, else we end up with the
+ silly situation that
+ f x y = x
+ ...map (f 3)...
+ doesn't inline. Even in a boring context, inlining without being
+ saturated will give a lambda instead of a PAP, and will be more
+ efficient at runtime.
+
+* However, when the function's arity > 0, we do insist that it
+ has at least one value argument at the call site. Otherwise we find this:
+ f = /\a \x:a. x
+ d = /\b. MkD (f b)
+ If we inline f here we get
+ d = /\b. MkD (\x:b. x)
+ and then prepareRhs floats out the argument, abstracting the type
+ variables, so we end up with the original again!
+