[ghc-steering-committee] #536: Type-level literals as a separate language extension
Simon Peyton Jones
simon.peytonjones at gmail.com
Thu Oct 19 17:32:19 UTC 2023
I (now) lean to rejection, but not strongly so. I have expressed my view
on the discussion
https://github.com/ghc-proposals/ghc-proposals/pull/536#issuecomment-1771422345
Simon
On Wed, 18 Oct 2023 at 18:30, Vladislav Zavialov <vlad.z.4096 at gmail.com>
wrote:
> Dear Committee,
>
> Back in March I initiated a discussion of #536 "Type-level literals as a
> separate language extension" by Ross Paterson. Quick recap: currently
> DataKinds controls promotion of ADTs and Symbol/Natural/Char literals. The
> proposal is to factor out promotion of literals into their own extension,
> TypeLevelLiterals.
>
> I recommended acceptance but received mixed feedback. Summary of opinions:
> Vlad: "rec: accept"
> SPJ: "content to accept"
> Joachim: "unsure how that fits with the overall direction we have for
> namespaces"
> Arnaud: "unconvinced that it is worth yet one extra extension"
> Richard: "pretty strongly against"
> Adam: "avoid bundling together distinct features" (i.e. accept)
> Chris: "in favour"
> Iavor (as ex-member): "strongly in favor"
>
> Haven't yet expressed their opinion: Simon M. and Moritz.
>
> So we have roughly 5 votes in-favor-or-don't-mind and 3 votes
> against-or-unconvinced. SPJ suggested that we simply count the votes, but
> after reading the discussion, I find that there's a deeper reason for
> disagreement. Essentially, we have two camps:
>
> 1. "Let a thousand flowers bloom": Haskell should be customizable, built
> out of small extensions à la carte. (A necessary implication here is that
> this gives rise to dialects of Haskell that depend on the set of enabled
> extensions)
> 2. "More extensions make me wince": Extensions are a necessary evil while
> we explore the language design space, and we shouldn't create them
> unnecessarily. (Language editions like GHC2021 help with that, allowing the
> users to forget about individual extensions and simply use a better/newer
> Haskell)
>
> The 1st paradigm suggests that TypeLevelLiterals should be factored out. TypeLevelLiterals+TypeData
> form a dialect different from DataKinds with regards to name resolution,
> which some users might prefer. Let them have it, why not?
>
> The 2nd paradigm suggests that breaking DataKinds into smaller extensions
> is counterproductive. Do we want fewer extensions or more extensions, after
> all? And as a steering committee, don't we have a clear direction in which
> we steer?
>
> Unfortunately, we don't have a general policy that would clearly tell us
> which camp/paradigm is right. And it's about time that we make a decision
> regarding #536, even if we don't have a policy to guide us.
>
> Because of that, my new plan is to reject the proposal out of caution. We
> have at least one "strongly against", and it's enough to give me pause.
> It's probably better to stick to the status quo, at least until we develop
> a concrete stance w.r.t. fine-grained extensions. (Pardon a digression, but
> this also calls into question whether 448 is justified in splitting
> ScopedTypeVariables into ExtendedForAllScope, MethodTypeVariables,
> PatternSignatures. Maybe we don't want fine-grained extensions after all)
>
> The new recommendation is to reject the proposal, but I still can't make
> this decision single-handedly. So let's do another round of discussion,
> only this time let's stick to practicalities, not general considerations.
> Is there anyone on the committee (or do we know someone) who needs TypeLevelLiterals
> for practical reasons, not just as a matter of taste? For example,
> 1. You are writing a book and you want to introduce TypeLevelLiterals
> before DataKinds
> 2. You are developing or maintaining a library or application that needs
> TypeLevelLiterals but cannot use DataKinds
> 3. You are working on an alternative Haskell implementation and intend to
> support TypeLevelLiterals but not DataKinds
>
> If any of the above (or similar) applies, speak up.
>
> Vlad
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