optics-core-0.2: Optics as an abstract interface: core definitions

Safe HaskellNone
LanguageHaskell2010

Optics.Label

Description

Overloaded labels are a solution to Haskell's namespace problem for records. The -XOverloadedLabels extension allows a new expression syntax for labels, a prefix # sign followed by an identifier, e.g. #foo. These expressions can then be given an interpretation that depends on the type at which they are used and the text of the label.

The following example shows how overloaded labels can be used as optics.

Example

Consider the following:

>>> :set -XDataKinds
>>> :set -XFlexibleContexts
>>> :set -XFlexibleInstances
>>> :set -XMultiParamTypeClasses
>>> :set -XOverloadedLabels
>>> :set -XTypeFamilies
>>> :set -XUndecidableInstances
>>> :{
data Human = Human
  { humanName :: String
  , humanAge  :: Integer
  , humanPets :: [Pet]
  } deriving Show
data Pet
  = Cat  { petName :: String, petAge :: Int, petLazy :: Bool }
  | Fish { petName :: String, petAge :: Int }
  deriving Show
:}

The following instances can be generated by makeFieldLabels from Optics.TH in the optics-th package:

>>> :{
instance (a ~ String, b ~ String) => LabelOptic "name" A_Lens Human Human a b where
  labelOptic = lensVL $ \f s -> (\v -> s { humanName = v }) <$> f (humanName s)
instance (a ~ Integer, b ~ Integer) => LabelOptic "age" A_Lens Human Human a b where
  labelOptic = lensVL $ \f s -> (\v -> s { humanAge = v }) <$> f (humanAge s)
instance (a ~ [Pet], b ~ [Pet]) => LabelOptic "pets" A_Lens Human Human a b where
  labelOptic = lensVL $ \f s -> (\v -> s { humanPets = v }) <$> f (humanPets s)
instance (a ~ String, b ~ String) => LabelOptic "name" A_Lens Pet Pet a b where
  labelOptic = lensVL $ \f s -> (\v -> s { petName = v }) <$> f (petName s)
instance (a ~ Int, b ~ Int) => LabelOptic "age" A_Lens Pet Pet a b where
  labelOptic = lensVL $ \f s -> (\v -> s { petAge = v }) <$> f (petAge s)
instance (a ~ Bool, b ~ Bool) => LabelOptic "lazy" An_AffineTraversal Pet Pet a b where
  labelOptic = atraversalVL $ \point f s -> case s of
    Cat name age lazy -> (\lazy' -> Cat name age lazy') <$> f lazy
    _                 -> point s
:}

Here is some test data:

>>> :{
peter :: Human
peter = Human "Peter" 13 [ Fish "Goldie" 1
                         , Cat  "Loopy"  3 False
                         , Cat  "Sparky" 2 True
                         ]
:}

Now we can ask for Peter's name:

>>> view #name peter
"Peter"

or for names of his pets:

>>> toListOf (#pets % folded % #name) peter
["Goldie","Loopy","Sparky"]

We can check whether any of his pets is lazy:

>>> orOf (#pets % folded % #lazy) peter
True

or how things might be be a year from now:

>>> peter & over #age (+1) & over (#pets % mapped % #age) (+1)
Human {humanName = "Peter", humanAge = 14, humanPets = [Fish {petName = "Goldie", petAge = 2},Cat {petName = "Loopy", petAge = 4, petLazy = False},Cat {petName = "Sparky", petAge = 3, petLazy = True}]}

Perhaps Peter is going on vacation and needs to leave his pets at home:

>>> peter & set #pets []
Human {humanName = "Peter", humanAge = 13, humanPets = []}

Structure of LabelOptic instances

You might wonder why instances above are written in form

instance (a ~ [Pet], b ~ [Pet]) => LabelOptic "pets" A_Lens Human Human a b where

instead of

instance LabelOptic "pets" A_Lens Human Human [Pet] [Pet] where

The reason is that using the first form ensures that GHC always matches on the instance if either s or t is known and verifies type equalities later, which not only makes type inference better, but also allows it to generate good error messages.

For example, if you try to write peter & set #pets [] with the appropriate LabelOptic instance in the second form, you get the following:

interactive:16:1: error:
   • No instance for LabelOptic "pets" ‘A_Lens’ ‘Human’ ‘()’ ‘[Pet]’ ‘[a0]’
       (maybe you forgot to define it or misspelled a name?)
   • In the first argument of ‘print’, namely ‘it’
     In a stmt of an interactive GHCi command: print it

That's because empty list doesn't have type [Pet], it has type [r] and GHC doesn't have enough information to match on the instance we provided. We'd need to either annotate the list: peter & set #pets ([]::[Pet]) or the result type: peter & set #pets [] :: Human, which is suboptimal.

Here are more examples of confusing error messages if the instance for LabelOptic "age" is written without type equalities:

λ> view #age peter :: Char

interactive:28:6: error:
    • No instance for LabelOptic "age" ‘k0’ ‘Human’ ‘Human’ ‘Char’ ‘Char’
        (maybe you forgot to define it or misspelled a name?)
    • In the first argument of ‘view’, namely ‘#age’
      In the expression: view #age peter :: Char
      In an equation for ‘it’: it = view #age peter :: Char
λ> peter & set #age "hi"

interactive:29:1: error:
    • No instance for LabelOptic "age" ‘k’ ‘Human’ ‘b’ ‘a’ ‘[Char]’
        (maybe you forgot to define it or misspelled a name?)
    • When checking the inferred type
        it :: forall k b a. ((TypeError ...), Is k A_Setter) => b

If we use the first form, error messages become more accurate:

λ> view #age peter :: Char
interactive:31:6: error:
    • Couldn't match type ‘Char’ with ‘Integer’
        arising from the overloaded label ‘#age’
    • In the first argument of ‘view’, namely ‘#age’
      In the expression: view #age peter :: Char
      In an equation for ‘it’: it = view #age peter :: Char
λ> peter & set #age "hi"

interactive:32:13: error:
    • Couldn't match type ‘[Char]’ with ‘Integer’
        arising from the overloaded label ‘#age’
    • In the first argument of ‘set’, namely ‘#age’
      In the second argument of ‘(&)’, namely ‘set #age "hi"’
      In the expression: peter & set #age "hi"

Limitations arising from functional dependencies

Functional dependencies guarantee good type inference, but also create limitations. We can split them into two groups:

  • name s -> k a, name t -> k b
  • name s b -> t, name t a -> s

The first group ensures that when we compose two optics, the middle type is unambiguous. The consequence is that it's not possible to create label optics with a or b referencing type variables not referenced in s or t, i.e. getters for fields of rank 2 type or reviews for constructors with existentially quantified types inside.

The second group ensures that when we perform a chain of updates, the middle type is unambiguous. The consequence is that it's not possible to define label optics that:

  • Modify phantom type parameters of type s or t.
  • Modify type parameters of type s or t if a or b contain ambiguous applications of type families to these type parameters.
Synopsis

Documentation

class LabelOptic (name :: Symbol) k s t a b | name s -> k a, name t -> k b, name s b -> t, name t a -> s where Source #

Support for overloaded labels as optics. An overloaded label #foo can be used as an optic if there is an instance of LabelOptic "foo" k s t a b.

See Optics.Label for examples and further details.

Methods

labelOptic :: Optic k NoIx s t a b Source #

Used to interpret overloaded label syntax. An overloaded label #foo corresponds to labelOptic @"foo".

Instances
(LabelOptic name k s t a b, (TypeError ((((((((((((Text "No instance for LabelOptic " :<>: ShowType name) :<>: Text " ") :<>: QuoteType k) :<>: Text " ") :<>: QuoteType s) :<>: Text " ") :<>: QuoteType t) :<>: Text " ") :<>: QuoteType a) :<>: Text " ") :<>: QuoteType b) :$$: Text " (maybe you forgot to define it or misspelled a name?)") :: Constraint)) => LabelOptic name k s t a b Source #

If no instance matches, GHC tends to bury error messages "No instance for LabelOptic..." within a ton of other error messages about ambiguous type variables and overlapping instances which are irrelevant and confusing. Use overlappable instance providing a custom type error to cut its efforts short.

Instance details

Defined in Optics.Internal.Optic

Methods

labelOptic :: Optic k NoIx s t a b Source #

type LabelOptic' name k s a = LabelOptic name k s s a a Source #

Type synonym for a type-preserving optic as overloaded label.