Copyright | (c) Ivan Perez and Manuel Baerenz 2016 |
---|---|
License | BSD3 |
Maintainer | ivan.perez@keera.co.uk |
Safe Haskell | Safe-Inferred |
Language | Haskell2010 |
Monadic Stream Functions are synchronized stream functions with side effects.
MSF
s are defined by a function
unMSF :: MSF m a b -> a -> m (b, MSF m a b)
that executes one step of a simulation, and produces an output in a monadic
context, and a continuation to be used for future steps.
MSF
s are a generalisation of the implementation mechanism used by Yampa,
Wormholes and other FRP and reactive implementations.
This modules defines only the minimal core. By default, you should import Data.MonadicStreamFunction.Core or Data.MonadicStreamFunction whenever possible, and define your functions without accessing the MSF constuctor. Those modules, as well as other modules in dunai, also provide convenient instances. This module may be useful if you are extending dunai with functionality that cannot be (conveniently) expressed using the existing high-level API.
Definitions
Stepwise, side-effectful MSF
s without implicit knowledge of time.
MSF
s should be applied to streams or executed indefinitely or until they
terminate. See reactimate
and reactimateB
for details. In general,
calling the value constructor MSF
or the function unMSF
is discouraged.
Instances
Monad m => Arrow (MSF m) Source # | |
(Monad m, MonadPlus m) => ArrowZero (MSF m) Source # | Instance of |
(Monad m, MonadPlus m) => ArrowPlus (MSF m) Source # | Instance of |
Monad m => ArrowChoice (MSF m) Source # |
|
MonadFix m => ArrowLoop (MSF m) Source # |
|
Monad m => Category (MSF m :: Type -> Type -> Type) Source # | |
Monad m => Functor (MSF m a) Source # | |
(Functor m, Monad m) => Applicative (MSF m a) Source # |
|
(Functor m, Monad m, MonadPlus m) => Alternative (MSF m a) Source # | Instance of |
(Monad m, Floating b) => Floating (MSF m a b) Source # | |
Defined in Data.MonadicStreamFunction.Instances.Num exp :: MSF m a b -> MSF m a b # log :: MSF m a b -> MSF m a b # sqrt :: MSF m a b -> MSF m a b # (**) :: MSF m a b -> MSF m a b -> MSF m a b # logBase :: MSF m a b -> MSF m a b -> MSF m a b # sin :: MSF m a b -> MSF m a b # cos :: MSF m a b -> MSF m a b # tan :: MSF m a b -> MSF m a b # asin :: MSF m a b -> MSF m a b # acos :: MSF m a b -> MSF m a b # atan :: MSF m a b -> MSF m a b # sinh :: MSF m a b -> MSF m a b # cosh :: MSF m a b -> MSF m a b # tanh :: MSF m a b -> MSF m a b # asinh :: MSF m a b -> MSF m a b # acosh :: MSF m a b -> MSF m a b # atanh :: MSF m a b -> MSF m a b # log1p :: MSF m a b -> MSF m a b # expm1 :: MSF m a b -> MSF m a b # | |
(Monad m, Fractional b) => Fractional (MSF m a b) Source # |
|
(Monad m, Num b) => Num (MSF m a b) Source # | |
Defined in Data.MonadicStreamFunction.Instances.Num | |
(Monad m, VectorSpace v s) => VectorSpace (MSF m a v) s Source # | Vector-space instance for |
Monadic computations and MSF
s
:: Monad m2 | |
=> (forall c. (a1 -> m1 (b1, c)) -> a2 -> m2 (b2, c)) | The natural transformation. |
-> MSF m1 a1 b1 | |
-> MSF m2 a2 b2 |
Generic lifting of a morphism to the level of MSF
s.
Natural transformation to the level of MSF
s.
Mathematical background: The type a -> m (b, c)
is a functor in c
,
and MSF m a b
is its greatest fixpoint, i.e. it is isomorphic to the type
a -> m (b, MSF m a b)
, by definition. The types m
, a
and b
are
parameters of the functor. Taking a fixpoint is functorial itself, meaning
that a morphism (a natural transformation) of two such functors gives a
morphism (an ordinary function) of their fixpoints.
This is in a sense the most general "abstract" lifting function, i.e. the
most general one that only changes input, output and side effect types, and
doesn't influence control flow. Other handling functions like exception
handling or ListT
broadcasting necessarily change control flow.
Feedback loops
feedback :: Monad m => c -> MSF m (a, c) (b, c) -> MSF m a b Source #
Well-formed looped connection of an output component as a future input.
Execution/simulation
embed :: Monad m => MSF m a b -> [a] -> m [b] Source #
Apply a monadic stream function to a list.
Because the result is in a monad, it may be necessary to traverse the whole
list to evaluate the value in the results to WHNF. For example, if the
monad is the maybe monad, this may not produce anything if the MSF
produces Nothing
at any point, so the output stream cannot consumed
progressively.
To explore the output progressively, use arrM
and (>>>)
', together with
some action that consumes/actuates on the output.
This is called runSF
in Liu, Cheng, Hudak, "Causal Commutative Arrows and
Their Optimization"