[Haskell-beginners] Ambiguous type variables
Dennis Raddle
dennis.raddle at gmail.com
Wed Mar 19 01:47:31 UTC 2014
I have another question, speaking of optimizing too soon. My data
structures will be things like rows of musical notes, implementable easily
as lists of lists. But I will often need to do things like replace one
element in a list. Should I use Array's? As I see it, lists get me certain
simplicity, and many operations using the natural syntax will be concise.
But then I'll have to do searches or random access and replacement.
What criteria does one use to make decisions like this? Do the easiest one
first and optimize later? I'm not even sure which is easiest as I don't
think there is a list element replacement function in the libraries.
On Mon, Mar 17, 2014 at 3:56 PM, Dennis Raddle <dennis.raddle at gmail.com>wrote:
>
>
>
> On Mon, Mar 17, 2014 at 1:28 PM, Kim-Ee Yeoh <ky3 at atamo.com> wrote:
>
>>
>> On Tue, Mar 18, 2014 at 2:14 AM, Dennis Raddle <dennis.raddle at gmail.com>wrote:
>>
>>> class Bt d c memo | d -> c, d -> memo where
>>
>>
>> Could you also say something about the instances you intend to implement
>> for this typeclass?
>>
>> If there's only 1, which the statement of the problem suggests as much,
>> you can dispense of the typeclass entirely and just work with plain
>> functions!
>>
>> Could be that you want something working first and generalize /
>> polymorphize later.
>>
>
>
> I don't know yet how I want to represent the solution being searched for;
> i.e. I don't know how I want to represent musical structures, and I need
> the freedom to try different ones without rewriting my code. I also wanted
> to implement a few toy problems to do testing on my algorithm.
>
> But, you are absolutely right that I am generalizing too quickly. I worked
> on a toy problem today and had several insights. I noticed that some
> problems have specifics that don't fit the same mold.
> -Dennis
>
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