set-monad
Version 0.2.0.0 revision 1 uploaded by sjakobi.
Package meta
- Synopsis
- Set monad
- Description
The
set-monad
library exports theSet
abstract data type and set-manipulating functions. These functions behave exactly as their namesakes from theData.Set
module of thecontainers
library. In addition, theset-monad
library extendsData.Set
by providingFunctor
,Applicative
,Alternative
,Foldable
,Monad
, andMonadPlus
instances for sets.In other words, you can use the
set-monad
library as a drop-in replacement for theData.Set
module of thecontainers
library and, in addition, you will also get the aforementioned instances which are not available in thecontainers
package.It is not possible to directly implement instances for the aforementioned standard Haskell type classes for the
Set
data type from thecontainers
library. This is because the key operationsmap
andunion
, are constrained withOrd
as follows.map :: (Ord a, Ord b) => (a -> b) -> Set a -> Set b union :: (Ord a) => Set a -> Set a -> Set a
The
set-monad
library provides the type class instances by wrapping the constrainedSet
type into a data type that has unconstrained constructors corresponding to monadic combinators. The data type constructors that represent monadic combinators are evaluated with a constrained run function. This elevates the need to use the constraints in the instance definitions (this is what prevents a direct definition). The wrapping and unwrapping happens internally in the library and does not affect its interface.For details, see the rather compact definitions of the
run
function and type class instances. The left identity and associativity monad laws play a crucial role in the definition of therun
function. The rest of the code should be self explanatory.The technique is not new. This library was inspired by [1]. To my knowledge, the original, systematic presentation of the idea to represent monadic combinators as data is given in [2]. There is also a Haskell library that provides a generic infrastructure for the aforementioned wrapping and unwrapping [3].
The
set-monad
library is particularly useful for writing set-oriented code using the do and/or monad comprehension notations. For example, the following definitions now type check.s1 :: Set (Int,Int) s1 = do a <- fromList [1 .. 4] b <- fromList [1 .. 4] return (a,b)
-- with -XMonadComprehensions s2 :: Set (Int,Int) s2 = [ (a,b) | (a,b) <- s1, even a, even b ]
s3 :: Set Int s3 = fmap (+1) (fromList [1 .. 4])
As noted in [1], the implementation technique can be used for monadic libraries and EDSLs with restricted types (compiled EDSLs often restrict the types that they can handle). Haskell's standard monad type class can be used for restricted monad instances. There is no need to resort to GHC extensions that rebind the standard monadic combinators with the library or EDSL specific ones.
[
1]
CSDL Blog: The home of applied functional programming at KU. Monad Reification in Haskell and the Sunroof Javascript compiler. http://www.ittc.ku.edu/csdlblog/?p=88[
2]
Chuan-kai Lin. 2006. Programming monads operationally with Unimo. In Proceedings of the eleventh ACM SIGPLAN International Conference on Functional Programming (ICFP '06). ACM.[
3]
Heinrich Apfelmus. The operational package. http://hackage.haskell.org/package/operational- Author
- George Giorgidze
- Bug reports
- n/a
- Category
- Data, Monad
- Copyright
- n/a
- Homepage
- n/a
- Maintainer
- giorgidze@gmail.com
- Package URL
- n/a
- Stability
- n/a