Copyright | (C) 2016 Edward Kmett and Eric Mertens |
---|---|
License | BSD-style (see the file LICENSE) |
Maintainer | Edward Kmett <ekmett@gmail.com> |
Stability | experimental |
Portability | non-portable |
Safe Haskell | Trustworthy |
Language | Haskell98 |
This module provides a shim around coerce
that defaults to unsafeCoerce
on GHC < 7.8. It also exposes a type-restricted version of '(#.)' that
works around a bizarre GHC 7.10–specific bug.
Documentation
coerce :: Coercible a b => a -> b #
The function coerce
allows you to safely convert between values of
types that have the same representation with no run-time overhead. In the
simplest case you can use it instead of a newtype constructor, to go from
the newtype's concrete type to the abstract type. But it also works in
more complicated settings, e.g. converting a list of newtypes to a list of
concrete types.
(#..) :: (Profunctor p, Coercible c b) => (b -> c) -> p a b -> p a c Source #