Monoid: Difference between revisions
m (Links fixed) |
Rimmington (talk | contribs) m (fixed "Arrows, like Monads, are Monoids" link) |
||
Line 18: | Line 18: | ||
Generalizations of monoids feature in [[Category theory]], for example: | Generalizations of monoids feature in [[Category theory]], for example: | ||
* [http://www. | * [http://www.researchgate.net/publication/235540658_Arrows_like_Monads_are_Monoids/file/d912f511ccdf2c1016.pdf Arrows, like Monads, are Monoids] (PDF) |
Revision as of 09:41, 18 February 2014
This article is a stub. You can help by expanding it.
A monoid is an algebraic structure with an associative binary operation that has an identity element. Examples include:
- lists under concatenation
- numbers under addition or multiplication
- Booleans under conjunction or disjunction
- sets under union or intersection
- functions from a type to itself, under composition
Note that in most of these cases the operation is also commutative, but it need not be; concatenation and function composition are not commutative.
A Monoid class is defined in Data.Monoid, and used in Data.Foldable and in the Writer monad.
The monoid interface enables a number of algorithms, including parallel algorithms and tree searches, e.g.:
- An introduction: Haskell Monoids and their Uses
- The blog article Monoids and Finger Trees
- Monad.Reader issue 11, "How to Refold a Map." (PDF), and a follow up
Generalizations of monoids feature in Category theory, for example: