----------------------------------------------------------------------------- -- | -- Module: Data.Pattern.Pattern -- License: BSD3 -- Maintainer: Brent Yorgey -- Stability: experimental -- Portability: non-portable (see .cabal) -- -- The main types used in the implementation of first-class patterns: -- 'Pattern' and 'Clause'. ----------------------------------------------------------------------------- {-# LANGUAGE PolyKinds, DataKinds #-} module Data.Pattern.Base ( -- * Patterns Pattern(..), -- * Clauses Clause, runClause, (->>), (<|>), -- * Internals module Data.Pattern.Base.TypeList, module Data.Pattern.Base.Tuple, ) where import Data.Pattern.Base.TypeList import Data.Pattern.Base.Tuple import Data.Maybe import Control.Applicative import Control.Monad import Control.Monad.Trans.Reader -- | The pattern type. A value of type @Pattern vars a@ is a pattern -- which matches values of type @a@ and binds variables with types -- given by the type-list @vars@. For example, something of type -- -- > Pattern (a :*: c :*: Nil) (a,b,c) -- -- is a pattern which matches against a triple and binds values of -- types @a@ and @c@. (A pattern of this type can be constructed as -- @tup3 var __ var@.) -- -- Many \"normal\" patterns can be conveniently defined using 'mk0', -- 'mk1', 'mk2', and so on. newtype Pattern vars a = Pattern { runPattern :: a -> Maybe (Tuple vars) } -- | Pattern-match clauses. Typically something of the form -- -- @pattern '->>' function@ -- -- where the function takes one argument for each variable bound by -- the pattern. -- -- Clauses can be constructed with @('->>')@, run with 'tryMatch', -- and manipulated by the 'Monad' and 'MonadPlus' instances. In -- particular, the @('<|>')@ operator from the 'Alternative' class -- is the way to list multiple cases in a pattern. newtype Clause a r = Clause { runClause :: ReaderT a Maybe r -- ^ Extract the underlying computation -- constituting a 'Clause'. This -- function is not intended to be used -- directly; instead, see 'match', -- 'tryMatch', 'mmatch', and 'elim' from -- "Data.Pattern.Common". } deriving(Functor,Applicative,Monad,Alternative,MonadPlus) -- (<|>) is infix 3, so we make (->>) infix 4. infix 4 ->> -- | Construct a 'Clause' from a pattern and a function which takes -- one argument for each variable bound by the pattern. For example, -- -- > pair __ nothing ->> 3 -- > pair var nothing ->> \x -> x + 3 -- > pair var (just var) ->> \x y -> x + y + 3 (->>) :: Pattern vars a -> Fun vars r -> Clause a r (Pattern p) ->> k = Clause (ReaderT $ fmap (flip runTuple k) . p)