Documentation
The Tag
type is like an ad-hoc GADT allowing runtime creation of new
constructors. Specifically, it is like a GADT "enumeration" with one
phantom type.
A Tag
constructor can be generated in any primitive monad (but only tags
from the same one can be compared). Every tag is equal to itself and to
no other. The GOrdering
class allows rediscovery of a tag's phantom type,
so that Tag
s and values of type
can be tested for
equality even when their types are not known to be equal.
DSum
(Tag
s)
Tag
uses a Uniq
as a witness of type equality, which is sound as long
as the Uniq
is truly unique and only one Tag
is ever constructed from
any given Uniq
. The type of newTag
enforces these conditions.
veryUnsafeMkTag
provides a way for adventurous (or malicious!) users to
assert that they know better than the type system.
newTag :: PrimMonad m => m (Tag (PrimState m) a)Source
Create a new tag witnessing a type a
. The GEq
or GOrdering
instance
can be used to discover type equality of two occurrences of the same tag.
(I'm not sure whether the recovery is sound if a
is instantiated as a
polymorphic type, so I'd advise caution if you intend to try it. I suspect
it is, but I have not thought through it very deeply and certainly have not
proved it.)
veryUnsafeMkTag :: Integer -> Tag s aSource
Very dangerous! This is essentially a deferred unsafeCoerce
: by creating
a tag with this function, the user accepts responsibility for ensuring
uniqueness of the Integer
across the lifetime of the Tag
(including
properly controlling the lifetime of the Tag
if necessary
by universal quantification when discharging the s
phantom type)