[ghc-steering-committee] Proposal: Embrace Type in Type

Simon Peyton Jones simonpj at microsoft.com
Wed Feb 21 14:23:07 UTC 2018


Is it true that we are supporting this proposal – except perhaps for the fate of “*”?    If so, let’s agree that much at least!

Simon

From: Iavor Diatchki [mailto:iavor.diatchki at gmail.com]
Sent: 09 February 2018 17:47
To: Simon Peyton Jones <simonpj at microsoft.com>
Cc: Richard Eisenberg <rae at cs.brynmawr.edu>; ghc-steering-committee at haskell.org; Joachim Breitner <mail at joachim-breitner.de>
Subject: Re: [ghc-steering-committee] Proposal: Embrace Type in Type

The issue I see is that it is quite common to get a kind error without doing any fancy type level programming---in particular without writing kind signatures or anything like that.  So you'd have no reason to import `Data.Kind(Type)`.    The result would be that GHC would give quite a verbose error message, using the fully qualified name of `Type`.  Unless we did something special.

-Iavor


On Fri, Feb 9, 2018 at 2:41 AM Simon Peyton Jones <simonpj at microsoft.com<mailto:simonpj at microsoft.com>> wrote:
I’m not sure I see the problem here.  If ‘Int’ is not in scope then
f :: Int -> Int
won’t work.  What’s different about ‘Type’

Simon

From: ghc-steering-committee [mailto:ghc-steering-committee-bounces at haskell.org<mailto:ghc-steering-committee-bounces at haskell.org>] On Behalf Of Richard Eisenberg
Sent: 09 February 2018 04:26
To: Iavor Diatchki <iavor.diatchki at gmail.com<mailto:iavor.diatchki at gmail.com>>
Cc: ghc-steering-committee at haskell.org<mailto:ghc-steering-committee at haskell.org>; Joachim Breitner <mail at joachim-breitner.de<mailto:mail at joachim-breitner.de>>
Subject: Re: [ghc-steering-committee] Proposal: Embrace Type in Type

Thanks, Iavor, for bringing this up.

To clarify the proposal: -XStarIsType is orthogonal to deprecation. The extension is necessary in order to continue to parse existing programs, but if we choose to deprecate *, then we would deprecate even with -XStarIsType is enabled (precisely to avoid the half-deprecation scenario Iavor is worried about).

I envisioned always printing Type unqualified in error messages, even if it's not imported. If a user writes Type and it's out of scope, we could always have a special-case check suggesting they import Data.Kind. I won't argue this is a principled design, though, and is likely a poor choice if some other Type is in scope.

The truth is that I don't have a great way forward here (and haven't for years) and am very hopeful someone on this list can come up with one! :) The proposal has my best idea, but I'm still not thrilled with it.

Thanks,
Richard

On Feb 8, 2018, at 1:46 PM, Iavor Diatchki <iavor.diatchki at gmail.com<mailto:iavor.diatchki at gmail.com>> wrote:

Hello,

I didn't see any discussion about the third part of this proposal, namely the addition of a new extension called `StarIsKind`.  The idea is that when this is on, `*` will still be treated as a special alpha-numeric name, and it will *always* refer to the kind of inhabited types (i.e., same as know).  The difference is that it cannot be used as another type-level operator (e.g., for multiplication).

Presumably, when this extension is on, there would be no deprecation warning emitted for `*`? We should clarify this in the proposal.

I am not certain if this is a good idea.  It makes the use of `*` sort of "half" deprecated, and leaves us with multiple "standard" ways to refer to the same thing (e.g., in type errors).  Also, if we want people to update their code to use `Type` instead of `*`, then we are just delaying the pain point to whenever `StarIsKind` ends up being not on by default.

OTOH, if we don't have a standard short-hand way to refer to the kind of inhabited types, I imagine GHC will report some very ugly errors.  For example:

    • Expecting one more argument to ‘Maybe’
      Expected a type, but ‘Maybe’ has kind ‘Data.Kind.Type -> Data.Kind.Type’

And this is for a fairly simple kind error, they get much longer if, say, monad transformers are involved.

What do others think?

-Iavor






On Sat, Feb 3, 2018 at 8:24 PM Richard Eisenberg <rae at cs.brynmawr.edu<mailto:rae at cs.brynmawr.edu>> wrote:

> On Feb 1, 2018, at 8:58 PM, Joachim Breitner <mail at joachim-breitner.de<mailto:mail at joachim-breitner.de>> wrote:
>
> In particular in light of our use of “type” as a explicit namespace
> token – so far in export and import lists and fixity declarations – I
> worry that we will prevent ourselves from using more such explicit
> namespace things in the future.

This is a really good point. In private musings, I've often wondered about using the keyword `type` in expressions to denote a namespace change. More concretely, I'm worried about the Dreaded Namespace Problem (DNP): that is, a dependently typed language does not want to have separate type-level and term-level namespaces. Of course, Haskell has this.

The best solution I have so far to the DNP is to introduce a *new* namespace, distinct from the two namespaces we have so far. Let's call it the "default" namespace. When -XDependentTypes is on, the default namespace is in effect. Name lookup looks first in the default namespace. If that fails the namespace consulted next depends on context: the "data" namespace in terms and the "type" namespace in type signatures. (This last bit needs to be specified more concretely, but you get the idea.) Or, perhaps, a failed lookup in the default namespace will look up in both the type and data namespaces, erroring if a name appears in both.

If a user wants to specify a namespace directly, they have a very easy way to do so: `type Foo` will look in the type namespace, `data Foo` will look in the data namespace, and `default Foo` will look in the default namespace. :) Because these keywords make sense currently only at the beginning of a line, this Just Works. I also imagined these constructs could scope over a subexpression: `type (T S)`.

All of this deserves a proper proposal and it's too early for that proposal. Nevertheless, I'm grateful that Joachim said something here, given that adding `type` as a spelling of `Type` would invalidate this approach. I also am swayed by the fact that `Type` isn't fully primitive, and making a keyword mean something that's not primitive is a bit awkward. I thus retract this proposed alternative and will update the proposal accordingly.

Richard
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