Partibles for composing monads

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Revision as of 04:12, 2 April 2022 by Atravers (talk | contribs) (Examples simplified)
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Having praised monads to the hilt, let me level one criticism. Monads tend to be an all-or-nothing proposition. If you discover that you need interaction deep within your program, you must rewrite that segment to use a monad. If you discover that you need two sorts of interaction, you tend to make a single monad support both sorts. It seems to me that instead we should be able to move smoothly from no monads (no interactions) to one monad (a single form of interaction) to many monads (several independent forms of interactions). How to achieve this remains a challenge for the future.

How to Declare an Imperative, Philip Wadler.

Assuming the partible types being used are appropriately defined, then:

type M p a  =  p -> a

unit        ::  Partible p =>    a -> M p a
unit x      =  \ u -> let !_ = part u in x

bind        ::  Partible p =>    M p a -> (a -> M p b) -> M p b
m `bind` k  =  \ u -> let !(u1, u2) = part u in
                      let !x = m u1 in
                      let !y = k x u2 in
                      y 

next        ::  Partible p =>    M p a -> M p b -> M p b
m `next` w  =  \ u -> let !(u1, u2) = part u in
                      let !x = m u1 in
                      let !y = w u2 in
                      y

fail        ::  Partible p =>    String -> M p a
fail s      =  \ u -> let !_ = part u in error s

Furthermore:

mfix        :: Partible p =>     (a -> M p a) -> M p a
mfix m      =  \ u -> yet (\ x -> m x u)

mcommute    :: (Partible p1, Partible p2) => M p1 (M p2 a) -> M p2 (M p1 a)
mcommute g  =  \ v u -> g u v

mcommute'   :: (Monad m, Partible p) => m (M p a) -> M p (m a)
mcommute' m =  \ v -> liftM ($ v) m

where:

yet   :: (a -> a) -> a
yet f =  f (yet f)

Using partible types to define monadic ones can enable an intermediate approach to the use of effects, in contrast to the all-or-nothing proposition of only using the monadic interface. In addition, if the definitions for such monadic types are visible (e.g. as type synonyms), this may also allow the manipulation of control in ways beyond what the monadic interface provides.

Composing arrows

Partible types can also be used to define arrow types:

type A p b c =  (p -> b) -> (p -> c)

arr          :: Partible p      => (b -> c) -> A p b c
arr f        =  \ c' u -> f $! c' u


both         :: Partible p      => A p b c -> A p b' c' -> A p (b, b') (c, c')
f' `both` g' =  \ c' u -> let !(u1:u2:u3:_) = parts u in
                          let !(x, x')      = c' u1 in
                          let !y            = f' (unit x) u2 in
                          let !y'           = g' (unit x') u3 in
                          (y, y')                           
                where
                  unit x u = let !_ = part u in x

(...though most will probably opt for the convenience of the associated Kleisli type).


See also:


Atravers 04:31, 10 April 2018 (UTC)