{-# LANGUAGE ExistentialQuantification #-} {-# LANGUAGE TypeFamilies #-} {-# OPTIONS_GHC -O0 #-} -- | Several ways of expressing the polymorphic fix-point combinator in Haskell -- without resorting to value recursion or unsafe operations. -- This present code attempts to translate the OCaml version -- -- -- -- to Haskell. -- module Control.Fix where import Control.Monad.ST.Lazy import Data.STRef.Lazy import Data.Dynamic -- | Factorial written in the `open recursion style', without the use -- of recursion. fact self 0 = 1 fact self n = n * self (pred n) -- The first approach: using the iso-recursive algebraic data type -- The functions Wrap and unwrap witness the isomorphism -- -- > r == r -> a -- newtype Wrap a = Wrap{unwrap :: Wrap a -> a} fix1 f = let aux g = g (Wrap g) in aux (\x -> f (unwrap x x)) test1 = fix1 fact 5 -- 120 -- | The 2. approach: using Dynamics for type abstraction. -- This is the only example where constraints, Typeable in this case, -- are imposed. -- The other fixes in this file are fully polymorphic. fix2 f = let wrap = toDyn unwrap x = fromDyn x undefined aux g = g (wrap g) in aux (\x -> f (unwrap x x)) test2 = fix2 fact (5::Int) -- 120 -- | The third approach: type abstraction, impredicativity -- and implicit type-level recursion: -- the data type declaration can refer to a class that refers -- to the type being declared -- No spurious constraints are introduced data W3 a = forall d. C d => W3 (d a -> a) class C d where unwrap3 :: (d a -> a) -> W3 a -> a instance C W3 where unwrap3 = ($) fix3 f = let aux g = g (W3 g) in aux (\x -> f (case x of W3 h -> unwrap3 h x)) test3 = fix3 fact 5 -- 120 -- | Even better example, exploiting the fact that type classes and -- type families are open. Hence we can define instances afterwards, -- referring to already defined types. -- Haskell is inconsistent in yet another way. -- type family D a :: * newtype W31 a = W31 (D a -> a) type instance D a = W31 a fix31 f = let aux g = g (W31 g) in aux (\x -> f (case x of W31 h -> h x)) test31 = fix31 fact 5 -- 120 -- | The fourth approach: using references and laziness -- Any sort of partiality (partial pattern-match) would work instead -- of the error call. -- The example might seem paradoxical: the effect of reading the wrap -- cell seems to be occurring in the pure code. -- Lazy ST is indeed quite interesting (for more discussion, see -- Moggi and Sabry, 2001). -- fix4 f = runST (do wrap <- newSTRef (error "black hole") let aux = readSTRef wrap >>= (\x -> x >>= return . f) writeSTRef wrap aux aux) test4 = fix4 fact 5 -- 120