A language extension for dealing with Prelude.foldr vs Foldable.foldr and similar dilemmas

Simon Peyton-Jones simonpj at microsoft.com
Fri May 24 18:00:00 CEST 2013


Oh my!  Now it's getting complicated.  
* I suppose that if Data.List re-exports foldr, it would go with the more specific type.  
* In your example, can I also use the more-polymorphic foldr, perhaps by saying Data.Foldable.foldr?
* I wonder what would happen if Data.Foo specialised foldr in a different way, and some module imported both Data.List and Data.Foo.  Maybe it would be ok if one of the two specialised types was more specific than the other but not if they were comparable?
* What happens for classes?  Can you specialise the signatures there?  And make instances of that specialised class?
* Ditto data types

It feel a bit like a black hole to me.

Simon
| -----Original Message-----
| From: Daniel Gorín [mailto:dgorin at dc.uba.ar]
| Sent: 24 May 2013 08:42
| To: Simon Peyton-Jones
| Cc: glasgow-haskell-users at haskell.org
| Subject: Re: A language extension for dealing with Prelude.foldr vs
| Foldable.foldr and similar dilemmas
| 
| On May 24, 2013, at 9:28 AM, Simon Peyton-Jones wrote:
| 
| > How about (in Haskell98)
| >
| > 	module Data.List ( foldr, ...)
| > 	import qualified Data.Foldable
| > 	foldr :: (a -> b -> b) -> b -> [a] -> b
| > 	foldr = Data.Foldable.foldr
| 
| It would not be the same! Using your example one will get that the following
| fails to compile:
| 
| > import Data.List
| > import Data.Foldable
| > f = foldr
| 
| The problem is that Data.List.foldr and Data.Foldable.foldr are here different
| symbols with the same name.
| This is precisely why Foldable, Traversable, Category, etc are awkward to use.
| The proposal is to make Data.List reexport Data.Foldable.foldr (with a more
| specialized type) so that the module above can be accepted.
| 
| Thanks,
| Daniel
| 
| > Simon
| >
| > | -----Original Message-----
| > | From: glasgow-haskell-users-bounces at haskell.org [mailto:glasgow-haskell-
| > | users-bounces at haskell.org] On Behalf Of Daniel Gorín
| > | Sent: 24 May 2013 01:27
| > | To: glasgow-haskell-users at haskell.org
| > | Subject: A language extension for dealing with Prelude.foldr vs
| Foldable.foldr
| > | and similar dilemmas
| > |
| > | Hi all,
| > |
| > | Given the ongoing discussion in the libraries mailing list on replacing (or
| > | removing) list functions in the Prelude in favor of the Foldable / Traversable
| > | generalizations, I was wondering if this wouldn't be better handled by a
| mild
| > | (IMO) extension to the module system.
| > |
| > | In a nutshell, the idea would be 1) to allow a module to export a specialized
| > | version of a symbol (e.g., Prelude could export Foldable.foldr but with the
| > | specialized type (a -> b -> b) -> b -> [a] -> b) and 2) provide a
| disambiguation
| > | mechanism by which when a module imports several versions of the same
| > | symbol (each, perhaps, specialized), a sufficiently general type is assigned
| to it.
| > |
| > | The attractive I see in this approach is that (enabling an extension) one
| could
| > | just import and use Foldable and Traversable (and even Category!) without
| > | qualifying nor hiding anything; plus no existing code would break and
| beginners
| > | would still get  the friendlier error of the monomorphic functions. I also
| expect
| > | it to be relatively easy to implement.
| > |
| > | In more detail, the proposal is to add two related language extensions,
| which,
| > | for the sake of having a name, I refer to here as MoreSpecificExports and
| > | MoreGeneralImports.
| > |
| > | 1) With MoreSpecificExports the grammar is extended to allow type
| > | annotations on symbols in the export list of a module. One could then have,
| > | e.g., something like:
| > |
| > | {-# LANGUAGE MoreSpecificExports #-}
| > | module Data.List (
| > |      ...
| > |      Data.Foldable.foldr :: (a -> b -> b) -> b -> [a] -> b
| > |    , Data.Foldable.foldl :: (b -> a -> b) -> b -> [a] -> b
| > |     ...
| > | )
| > |
| > | where
| > |
| > | import Data.Foldable
| > | ...
| > |
| > | instance Foldable [] where ...
| > |
| > |
| > | For consistency, symbols defined in the module could also be exported
| > | specialized. The type-checker needs to check that the type annotation is in
| fact
| > | a valid specialization of the original type, but this is, I think, straightforward.
| > |
| > |
| > | 2) If a module imports Data.List and Data.Foldable as defined above
| *without*
| > | the counterpart MoreGeneralImports extension, then Data.List.foldr and
| > | Data.Foldable.foldr are to be treated as unrelated symbols, so foldr would
| be
| > | an ambiguous symbol, just like it is now.
| > |
| > | If on the other hand a module enables MoreGeneralImports and a symbol f
| is
| > | imported n times with types T1, T2, ... Tn,  the proposal is to assign to f the
| > | most general type among T1... Tn, if such type exists (or fail otherwise). So
| if in
| > | the example above we enable MoreGeneralImports, foldr will have type
| > | Foldable t => (a -> b -> b) -> b -> t a -> b, as desired.
| > |
| > | (It could be much more interesting to assign to f the least general
| > | generalization of T1...Tn, but this seems to require much more work (unless
| > | GHC already implements some anti-unification algorithm); also I'm not sure
| > | whether this would interact well with GADTs or similar features and in any
| case
| > | this could be added at a later stage without breaking existing programs).
| > |
| > |
| > | Would something like this address the problem? Are there any interactions
| that
| > | make this approach unsound? Any obvious cons I'm not seeing? Feedback is
| > | most welcome!
| > |
| > | Thanks,
| > | Daniel
| > | _______________________________________________
| > | Glasgow-haskell-users mailing list
| > | Glasgow-haskell-users at haskell.org
| > | http://www.haskell.org/mailman/listinfo/glasgow-haskell-users




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