Portability | non-portable |
---|---|
Stability | experimental |
Maintainer | Edward Kmett <ekmett@gmail.com> |
Safe Haskell | None |
Usage:
You can derive lenses automatically for many data types:
import Control.Lens data Foo a = Foo { _fooArgs :: [String
], _fooValue :: a }makeLenses
''Foo
This defines the following lenses:
fooArgs ::Lens'
(Foo a) [String
] fooValue ::Lens
(Foo a) (Foo b) a b
You can then access the value with (^.
) and set the value of the field
with (.~
) and can use almost any other combinator that is re-exported
here on those fields.
The combinators here have unusually specific type signatures, so for particularly tricky ones, the simpler type signatures you might want to pretend the combinators have are specified as well.
More information on how to use lenses is available on the lens wiki:
http://github.com/ekmett/lens/wiki
Documentation
module Control.Lens.Action
module Control.Lens.At
module Control.Lens.Combinators
module Control.Lens.Cons
module Control.Lens.Each
module Control.Lens.Equality
module Control.Lens.Fold
module Control.Lens.Getter
module Control.Lens.Indexed
module Control.Lens.Iso
module Control.Lens.Lens
module Control.Lens.Level
module Control.Lens.Loupe
module Control.Lens.Plated
module Control.Lens.Prism
module Control.Lens.Reified
module Control.Lens.Review
module Control.Lens.Setter
module Control.Lens.Simple
module Control.Lens.TH
module Control.Lens.Traversal
module Control.Lens.Tuple
module Control.Lens.Type
module Control.Lens.Wrapped
module Control.Lens.Zipper
module Control.Lens.Zoom