qualified exports , what would that mean Re: Add

Lennart Augustsson lennart at augustsson.net
Fri Feb 22 00:34:44 UTC 2019


Qualified exports seem very unproblematic to me.  And they should be easy
to implement. It’s just an extra flag on each exported entity that tells
compiler if the unqualified name should be entered into the symbol table or
not.

  — Lennart

On Thu, Feb 21, 2019 at 11:04 Carter Schonwald <carter.schonwald at gmail.com>
wrote:

> hey Levent,
> I can't claim to have thought about it that deeply, but naively, it seems
> like a qualified export approach might not play nice with certain
> approaches to seperate compilation (not that GHC does it that much),
> because the names qualifications wouldn't match possible import modules, Or
> at least the qualified names in scope wouldn't match what you see from the
> import lines, and thus you'd have a harder time supporting good quality
> error messages? (i could be totally wrong)
>
> its definitely an interesting idea, and i certainly dont have clarity on
> what the implications would be
>
> On Thu, Feb 21, 2019 at 1:42 PM Levent Erkok <erkokl at gmail.com> wrote:
>
>> I think Carter outlined really good reasons for not including `e`; but
>> it's hard not to sympathize with the request. I often felt shy of adding
>> similar definitions in my libraries for fear that they would pollute the
>> name space. But their absence is rather annoying. The classic solution is
>> to put it in a library, internal module etc, and make a new class if
>> necessary; which is often overkill and misses the simplicity sought in the
>> first place.
>>
>> I often wonder if Haskell can have a "qualified export" feature for these
>> cases. Just like we can "import qualified," why not "export qualified" some
>> names, which means if you simply import the module the name will still be
>> available qualified. (You can of course always import qualified.)
>>
>> I haven't thought too much about the implications of this, but it might
>> be an easy solution to this problem. Would love to hear thoughts on this;
>> is there any language that has this feature? How costly would it be to add
>> it to GHC?
>>
>> On Thu, Feb 21, 2019 at 10:32 AM chessai . <chessai1996 at gmail.com> wrote:
>>
>>> asymmetry in presence, not use.
>>>
>>> When I was first learning Haskell, the absence of e along with the
>>> presence of pi in Floating confused me. It is not a disservice to users to
>>> note this asymmetry in documentation and why it is not there.
>>>
>>> On Thu, Feb 21, 2019, 1:22 PM Carter Schonwald <
>>> carter.schonwald at gmail.com> wrote:
>>>
>>>> i dont see it as an assymetry, theres a lot of very simple volume /
>>>> area / probability /geometry calculations  where pi comes up,
>>>> i dont know any for e that aren't just exp. can you share some?
>>>>
>>>> On Wed, Feb 20, 2019 at 10:50 PM chessai . <chessai1996 at gmail.com>
>>>> wrote:
>>>>
>>>>> Yeah, I think it probably shouldn't be added to the typeclass then.
>>>>>
>>>>> The asymmetry should probably be mentioned in the report though.
>>>>>
>>>>>
>>>>> On Wed, Feb 20, 2019, 9:22 PM Carter Schonwald <
>>>>> carter.schonwald at gmail.com> wrote:
>>>>>
>>>>>> either way, we're not gonna add e :)
>>>>>>
>>>>>> On Wed, Feb 20, 2019 at 8:30 AM Yitzchak Gale <gale at sefer.org> wrote:
>>>>>>
>>>>>>> Lennart's question "Is it really worth it?" is the most important
>>>>>>> one.
>>>>>>> And no, probably it isn't.
>>>>>>>
>>>>>>> But Chessai is correct that this is a weird asymmetry in the Floating
>>>>>>> class. My own experience is that I user neither e nor pi very much,
>>>>>>> but neither one more than the other.
>>>>>>>
>>>>>>> Branch cuts of inverse trig functions are not relevant. The report
>>>>>>> doesn't explicitly state this, but it's clear that these functions
>>>>>>> are
>>>>>>> expected to return the standard ranges of values as in other
>>>>>>> programming languages. You can be quite certain that acos (-1) is pi
>>>>>>> in Haskell. And in fact, we have (at least on my computer)
>>>>>>>
>>>>>>> Prelude> acos (-1) == pi
>>>>>>> True
>>>>>>>
>>>>>>> So there isn't any more or less reason to have e than pi as a
>>>>>>> separate
>>>>>>> class member.
>>>>>>>
>>>>>>> On Sun, Feb 17, 2019 at 10:15 PM Lennart Augustsson
>>>>>>> <lennart at augustsson.net> wrote:
>>>>>>> >
>>>>>>> > Is it really worth it?  How frequent are uses of e, except used
>>>>>>> like exp?  On the other hand, pi has more frequent standalone use cases.
>>>>>>> > Also, e has a simple definition (exp 1), whereas pi is somewhat
>>>>>>> more involved.
>>>>>>> >
>>>>>>> > The logp1 and expm1 functions where added for good numerical
>>>>>>> reasons.  The same would not be true for e.
>>>>>>> >
>>>>>>> > On Sat, Feb 16, 2019 at 21:14 chessai . <chessai1996 at gmail.com>
>>>>>>> wrote:
>>>>>>> >>
>>>>>>> >> We have the 'pi' constant in the floating typeclass and some
>>>>>>> trigonometric functions, as well as things like exp/log/expm1/log1p.
>>>>>>> >>
>>>>>>> >> Why not provide an 'e' constant?
>>>>>>> >>
>>>>>>> >> A default implementation could just be 'exp 1'.
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