Safe Haskell | None |
---|---|
Language | Haskell2010 |
Constraints for indexed datatypes.
This module contains code that helps to specify that all elements of an indexed structure must satisfy a particular constraint.
Synopsis
- type family SListIN (h :: (k -> Type) -> l -> Type) :: l -> Constraint
- type family AllZipN (h :: (k -> Type) -> l -> Type) (c :: k1 -> k2 -> Constraint) :: l1 -> l2 -> Constraint
- type family AllN (h :: (k -> Type) -> l -> Type) (c :: k -> Constraint) :: l -> Constraint
- class Top x
- class (f x, g x) => And f g x
- class f (g x) => Compose f g x
- class (AllZipF (AllZip f) xss yss, SListI xss, SListI yss, SameShapeAs xss yss, SameShapeAs yss xss) => AllZip2 f xss yss
- class Coercible (f x) (g y) => LiftedCoercible f g x y
- type family Tail (xs :: [a]) :: [a] where ...
- type family Head (xs :: [a]) :: a where ...
- type family SameShapeAs (xs :: [a]) (ys :: [b]) :: Constraint where ...
- type family AllZipF (c :: a -> b -> Constraint) (xs :: [a]) (ys :: [b]) :: Constraint where ...
- class (SListI xs, SListI ys, SameShapeAs xs ys, SameShapeAs ys xs, AllZipF c xs ys) => AllZip (c :: a -> b -> Constraint) (xs :: [a]) (ys :: [b])
- type All2 c = All (All c)
- type SListI = All Top
- type SListI2 = All SListI
- type family AllF (c :: k -> Constraint) (xs :: [k]) :: Constraint where ...
- class (AllF c xs, SListI xs) => All (c :: k -> Constraint) (xs :: [k]) where
- cpara_SList :: proxy c -> r '[] -> (forall y ys. (c y, All c ys) => r ys -> r (y ': ys)) -> r xs
- ccase_SList :: All c xs => proxy c -> r '[] -> (forall y ys. (c y, All c ys) => r (y ': ys)) -> r xs
- data Constraint
Documentation
type family SListIN (h :: (k -> Type) -> l -> Type) :: l -> Constraint Source #
A generalization of SListI
.
The family SListIN
expands to SListI
or SListI2
depending
on whether the argument is indexed by a list or a list of lists.
Instances
type SListIN (POP :: (k -> Type) -> [[k]] -> Type) Source # | |
Defined in Data.SOP.NP | |
type SListIN (SOP :: (k -> Type) -> [[k]] -> Type) Source # | |
Defined in Data.SOP.NS | |
type SListIN (NP :: (k -> Type) -> [k] -> Type) Source # | |
Defined in Data.SOP.NP | |
type SListIN (NS :: (k -> Type) -> [k] -> Type) Source # | |
Defined in Data.SOP.NS |
type family AllZipN (h :: (k -> Type) -> l -> Type) (c :: k1 -> k2 -> Constraint) :: l1 -> l2 -> Constraint Source #
A generalization of AllZip
and AllZip2
.
The family AllZipN
expands to AllZip
or AllZip2
depending on
whther the argument is indexed by a list or a list of lists.
Instances
type AllZipN (POP :: (k -> Type) -> [[k]] -> Type) (c :: a -> b -> Constraint) Source # | |
Defined in Data.SOP.NP | |
type AllZipN (NP :: (k -> Type) -> [k] -> Type) (c :: a -> b -> Constraint) Source # | |
Defined in Data.SOP.NP |
type family AllN (h :: (k -> Type) -> l -> Type) (c :: k -> Constraint) :: l -> Constraint Source #
A generalization of All
and All2
.
The family AllN
expands to All
or All2
depending on whether
the argument is indexed by a list or a list of lists.
Instances
type AllN (POP :: (k -> Type) -> [[k]] -> Type) (c :: k -> Constraint) Source # | |
Defined in Data.SOP.NP | |
type AllN (SOP :: (k -> Type) -> [[k]] -> Type) (c :: k -> Constraint) Source # | |
Defined in Data.SOP.NS | |
type AllN (NP :: (k -> Type) -> [k] -> Type) (c :: k -> Constraint) Source # | |
Defined in Data.SOP.NP | |
type AllN (NS :: (k -> Type) -> [k] -> Type) (c :: k -> Constraint) Source # | |
Defined in Data.SOP.NS |
A constraint that can always be satisfied.
Since: 0.2
Instances
Top (x :: k) Source # | |
Defined in Data.SOP.Constraint |
class (f x, g x) => And f g x infixl 7 Source #
Pairing of constraints.
Since: 0.2
Instances
(f x, g x) => And (f :: k -> Constraint) (g :: k -> Constraint) (x :: k) Source # | |
Defined in Data.SOP.Constraint |
class f (g x) => Compose f g x infixr 9 Source #
Composition of constraints.
Note that the result of the composition must be a constraint,
and therefore, in
, the kind of Compose
f gf
is k ->
.
The kind of Constraint
g
, however, is l -> k
and can thus be an normal
type constructor.
A typical use case is in connection with All
on an NP
or an
NS
. For example, in order to denote that all elements on an
satisfy NP
f xsShow
, we can say
.All
(Compose
Show
f) xs
Since: 0.2
Instances
f (g x) => Compose (f :: k2 -> Constraint) (g :: k1 -> k2) (x :: k1) Source # | |
Defined in Data.SOP.Constraint |
class (AllZipF (AllZip f) xss yss, SListI xss, SListI yss, SameShapeAs xss yss, SameShapeAs yss xss) => AllZip2 f xss yss Source #
Require a constraint for pointwise for every pair of elements from two lists of lists.
Instances
(AllZipF (AllZip f) xss yss, SListI xss, SListI yss, SameShapeAs xss yss, SameShapeAs yss xss) => AllZip2 (f :: a -> b -> Constraint) (xss :: [[a]]) (yss :: [[b]]) Source # | |
Defined in Data.SOP.Constraint |
class Coercible (f x) (g y) => LiftedCoercible f g x y Source #
The constraint
is equivalent
to LiftedCoercible
f g x y
.Coercible
(f x) (g y)
Since: 0.3.1.0
Instances
Coercible (f x) (g y) => LiftedCoercible (f :: k2 -> k0) (g :: k1 -> k0) (x :: k2) (y :: k1) Source # | |
Defined in Data.SOP.Constraint |
type family Tail (xs :: [a]) :: [a] where ... Source #
Utility function to compute the tail of a type-level list.
Since: 0.3.1.0
Tail (x ': xs) = xs |
type family Head (xs :: [a]) :: a where ... Source #
Utility function to compute the head of a type-level list.
Since: 0.3.1.0
Head (x ': xs) = x |
type family SameShapeAs (xs :: [a]) (ys :: [b]) :: Constraint where ... Source #
Type family that forces a type-level list to be of the same shape as the given type-level list.
The main use of this constraint is to help type inference to learn something about otherwise unknown type-level lists.
Since: 0.3.1.0
SameShapeAs '[] ys = ys ~ '[] | |
SameShapeAs (x ': xs) ys = (ys ~ (Head ys ': Tail ys), SameShapeAs xs (Tail ys)) |
type family AllZipF (c :: a -> b -> Constraint) (xs :: [a]) (ys :: [b]) :: Constraint where ... Source #
Type family used to implement AllZip
.
Since: 0.3.1.0
class (SListI xs, SListI ys, SameShapeAs xs ys, SameShapeAs ys xs, AllZipF c xs ys) => AllZip (c :: a -> b -> Constraint) (xs :: [a]) (ys :: [b]) Source #
Require a constraint for pointwise for every pair of elements from two lists.
Example: The constraint
All (~) '[ Int, Bool, Char ] '[ a, b, c ]
is equivalent to the constraint
(Int ~ a, Bool ~ b, Char ~ c)
Since: 0.3.1.0
Instances
(SListI xs, SListI ys, SameShapeAs xs ys, SameShapeAs ys xs, AllZipF c xs ys) => AllZip (c :: a -> b -> Constraint) (xs :: [a]) (ys :: [b]) Source # | |
Defined in Data.SOP.Constraint |
type All2 c = All (All c) Source #
Require a constraint for every element of a list of lists.
If you have a datatype that is indexed over a type-level
list of lists, then you can use All2
to indicate that all
elements of the inner lists must satisfy a given constraint.
Example: The constraint
All2 Eq '[ '[ Int ], '[ Bool, Char ] ]
is equivalent to the constraint
(Eq Int, Eq Bool, Eq Char)
Example: A type signature such as
f :: All2 Eq xss => SOP I xs -> ...
means that f
can assume that all elements of the sum
of product satisfy Eq
.
Since 0.4.0.0, this is merely a synonym for 'All (All c)'.
Since: 0.4.0.0
type SListI = All Top Source #
Implicit singleton list.
A singleton list can be used to reveal the structure of a type-level list argument that the function is quantified over.
Since 0.4.0.0, this is now defined in terms of All
.
A singleton list provides a witness for a type-level list
where the elements need not satisfy any additional
constraints.
Since: 0.4.0.0
type family AllF (c :: k -> Constraint) (xs :: [k]) :: Constraint where ... Source #
Type family used to implement All
.
class (AllF c xs, SListI xs) => All (c :: k -> Constraint) (xs :: [k]) where Source #
Require a constraint for every element of a list.
If you have a datatype that is indexed over a type-level
list, then you can use All
to indicate that all elements
of that type-level list must satisfy a given constraint.
Example: The constraint
All Eq '[ Int, Bool, Char ]
is equivalent to the constraint
(Eq Int, Eq Bool, Eq Char)
Example: A type signature such as
f :: All Eq xs => NP I xs -> ...
means that f
can assume that all elements of the n-ary
product satisfy Eq
.
Note on superclasses: ghc cannot deduce superclasses from All
constraints.
You might expect the following to compile
class (Eq a) => MyClass a foo :: (All Eq xs) => NP f xs -> z foo = [..] bar :: (All MyClass xs) => NP f xs -> x bar = foo
but it will fail with an error saying that it was unable to
deduce the class constraint
(or similar) in the
definition of AllF
Eq
xsbar
.
In cases like this you can use Dict
from Data.SOP.Dict
to prove conversions between constraints.
See this answer on SO for more details.
cpara_SList :: proxy c -> r '[] -> (forall y ys. (c y, All c ys) => r ys -> r (y ': ys)) -> r xs Source #
Constrained paramorphism for a type-level list.
The advantage of writing functions in terms of cpara_SList
is that
they are then typically not recursive, and can be unfolded statically if
the type-level list is statically known.
Since: 0.4.0.0
Instances
All (c :: k -> Constraint) ([] :: [k]) Source # | |
Defined in Data.SOP.Constraint cpara_SList :: proxy c -> r [] -> (forall (y :: k0) (ys :: [k0]). (c y, All c ys) => r ys -> r (y ': ys)) -> r [] Source # | |
(c x, All c xs) => All (c :: a -> Constraint) (x ': xs :: [a]) Source # | |
Defined in Data.SOP.Constraint cpara_SList :: proxy c -> r [] -> (forall (y :: k) (ys :: [k]). (c y, All c ys) => r ys -> r (y ': ys)) -> r (x ': xs) Source # |
ccase_SList :: All c xs => proxy c -> r '[] -> (forall y ys. (c y, All c ys) => r (y ': ys)) -> r xs Source #
Constrained case distinction on a type-level list.
Since: 0.4.0.0
data Constraint #
The kind of constraints, like Show a