Difference between revisions of "TypeCompose"

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'''TypeCompose''' provides some classes & instances for forms of type composition, as well as some modules that haven't found another home.
 
'''TypeCompose''' provides some classes & instances for forms of type composition, as well as some modules that haven't found another home.
   
  +
Besides this wiki page, here are more ways to find out about TypeCompose.
 
* Read [http://darcs.haskell.org/packages/TypeCompose/doc/html the Haddock docs] (with source code, additional examples, and Comment/Talk links).
 
* Read [http://darcs.haskell.org/packages/TypeCompose/doc/html the Haddock docs] (with source code, additional examples, and Comment/Talk links).
 
* Get the code repository: '''<tt>darcs get http://darcs.haskell.org/packages/TypeCompose</tt>''', or
 
* Get the code repository: '''<tt>darcs get http://darcs.haskell.org/packages/TypeCompose</tt>''', or
 
* Grab a [http://darcs.haskell.org/packages/TypeCompose/dist distribution tarball].
 
* Grab a [http://darcs.haskell.org/packages/TypeCompose/dist distribution tarball].
 
* See the [[TypeCompose/Versions| version history]].
 
* See the [[TypeCompose/Versions| version history]].
  +
* See the use of TypeCompose in [[DataDriven]].
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Please leave comments at the [[Talk:TypeCompose|Talk page]].
   
 
== Type composition ==
 
== Type composition ==

Revision as of 19:14, 10 September 2007


Abstract

Warning: The Haddock docs are out of date. I'm trying to get a working haddock 2.0 running (on my windows machine).

TypeCompose provides some classes & instances for forms of type composition, as well as some modules that haven't found another home.

Besides this wiki page, here are more ways to find out about TypeCompose.

Please leave comments at the Talk page.

Type composition

The Control.Compose module includes

  • Various type compositions (unary/unary, binary/unary, etc). Most are from Applicative Programming with Effects. In particular, g `O` f composes functors in to functors and applicative functors (AFs) into AFs. (In contrast, monads do not in general compose.) Composition makes AF-based programming simple and elegant, partly because we don't need an AF counterpart to monad transformers.
  • Cofunctors (contravariant functors). Great for "consumer" types, just as functors suit "producer" (container) types. There are several composition options.
  • Type argument flip. Handy for cofunctors: use Flip (->) o, for (-> o).
  • Constructor in pairs: (f a, g a).
  • Constructor in arrows/functions: f a ~> g a.

Other features

Composable bijections

Given all the type constructors and compositions of them, I found myself writing some pretty awkward code to wrap & unwrap through multiple layers. Composable bijections help a lot.

The Data.Bijection module is inspired by There and Back Again: Arrows for Invertible Programming, though done here in a less general setting.

Pair- & function-like types

The Data.Pair and Data.Lambda patterns emerged while working on DeepArrow and Eros. Data.Pair generalizes zip and unzip from [] to other functors. It also provides variants of type f a -> f (a,b) and f a -> f (a,b). Data.Lambda is similar with classes for lambda-like constructions.

For example uses of Pair and Lambda, see TV and Eros.

References

Monads with references. Direct rip-off from Global Variables in Haskell.

Titling

For giving titles to things. I know it sounds kind of random. More useful than I first thought. Used in Phooey, TV, and Eros.

Partial values

A monoid of partial values. See the teaser and solution blog posts.

Context-dependent monoids

Bit of an oddball also. Data.CxMonoid defines a sort of meta-monoid, that can be supplied dynamically with choices of mempty and mappend. Used in Phooey (starting with version 1.3) so that layout could be a monoid but still vary in style.