Relude

relude is a custom prelude, an alternative to default Prelude.
relude tries to achieve the following goals:
-
Avoid all partial functions
(like head :: [a] -> a). The types of partial functions lie about their
behavior and usage of such functions can lead to the unexpected bugs. Though
you can still use some unsafe functions from Relude.Unsafe module, but they
are not exported by default.
-
Type-safety. We like to make invalid states unrepresantable. And if it's
possible to express this concept through the types then we will do it.
Example:
whenNotNull :: Applicative f => [a] -> (NonEmpty a -> f ()) -> f ()
instead of
whenNotNull :: Applicative f => [a] -> ([a] -> f ()) -> f ()
-
Performance. Prefer Text over String,
use spaceleak-free functions (like our custom sum and product), introduce
{-# INLINE #-} and {-# SPECIALIZE #-} pragmas where appropriate.
-
Minimalism (low number of dependencies). We don't force users of relude to
stick to some specific lens or text formatting or logging library.
-
Convenience (like lifted to MonadIO functions, more reexports). But we
want to bring common types and functions (like containers and bytestring)
into scope because they are used in almost every application anyways.
-
Provide excellent documentation.
-
User-friendliness. Ability to quickly migrate to relude if you're familiar
with the common libraries like text and containers.
-
Exploration. Experiment with new ideas and proposals without introducing
breaking changes. relude uses the approach with Extra.* modules which are not
exported by default so it's quite easy to bring something new and let users
decide to use it or not.
This README contains introduction to Relude and a tutorial on how to use it.
Structure of this tutorial
This tutorial has several parts:
- Get started.
- Difference from
Prelude.
- Reexports.
- What's new?
- Migration guide.
- For developers.
This is neither a tutorial on Haskell nor tutorial on each function contained
in Relude. For detailed documentation of every function together with examples
and usage, see Haddock documentation.
Get started ↑
If you want to start using relude in your project and explore it with the help
of compiler, set everything up according to the instructions below.
base-noprelude
This is the recommended way to use custom prelude. It requires you to perform
the following steps:
- Replace
base dependency with corresponding version of base-noprelude in
your .cabal file.
- Add a
relude dependency to your .cabal file.
- Add the following
Prelude module to your project (both to filesystem and to exposed-modules):
module Prelude
( module Relude
) where
import Relude
NOTE: if you use summoner to generate Haskell project,
this tool can automatically create such structure for you when you specify custom prelude.
- Optionally modify your
Prelude to include more or less functions. Probably
you want to hide something from Relude module. Or maybe you want to add
something from Relude.Extra.* modules!
This is a very convenient way to add a custom prelude to your project because
you don't need to import module manually inside each file and enable the
NoImplicitPrelude extension.
Per-file configuration
Disable the built-in prelude at the top of your file:
{-# LANGUAGE NoImplicitPrelude #-}
Or directly in your project .cabal file, if you want to use in every module by default:
default-extensions: NoImplicitPrelude
Then add the following import to your modules:
import Relude
Difference from Prelude ↑
head, tail, last, init work with NonEmpty a instead of [a].
undefined triggers a compiler warning, because you probably don't want to
leave undefined in your code. Either use throwIO, Except, error or
bug.
- Multiple sorting functions are available without imports:
sortBy :: (a -> a -> Ordering) -> [a] -> [a]: sorts list using given custom comparator.
sortWith :: Ord b => (a -> b) -> [a] -> [a]: sorts a list based on some property of its elements.
sortOn :: Ord b => (a -> b) -> [a] -> [a]: just like sortWith, but more
time-efficient if function is calculated slowly (though less
space-efficient). So you should write sortOn length (would sort elements
by length) but sortWith fst (would sort list of pairs by first element).
- Functions
sum and product are strict now, which makes them more efficient.
- Since
show doesn't come from Show anymore, you need to export Show from
Text.Show module if you want to implement Show instance manually.
- You can't call
elem and notElem functions over Set and HashSet. These
functions are forbidden for these two types because of the performance reasons.
error takes Text.
lookup for lists is not exported.
Reexports ↑
relude reexports some parts of the following libraries:
base
containers
unordered-containers
text
bytestring
transformers
mtl
deepseq
stm
If you want to clean up imports after switching to relude, you can use
relude-specific .hlint.yaml configuration for this task.
base
Some generally useful modules from base package, like: Control.Applicative,
Data.Traversable, Data.Monoid, Data.List, and lots of others.
liftIO and MonadIO are exported by default. A lot of IO functions are
generalized to MonadIO.
Bifunctor
type class with useful instances is exported.
first and second functions apply a function to first/second part of a tuple (for tuples).
bimap takes two functions and applies them to first and second parts respectively.
trace, traceM, traceShow, etc. are available by default. GHC will warn you
if you accidentally leave them in code, however (same for undefined).
We also have data Undefined = Undefined (which, too, comes with warnings).
relude reexports Exception type from the base package and introduces the
bug function as an alternative to error. There's also a very convenient
Exc pattern-synonym to handle exceptions of different types.
See Relude.Exception module for details on exceptions.
containers & unordered-containers
The following types from these two packages are exported:
Then, some commonly used types:
- Maps: strict versions of
Map, HashMap, IntMap.
- Sets:
Set, HashSet, IntSet.
- Sequences:
Seq.
text & bytestring
relude exports Text and ByteString (as well as synonyms LText and LByteString
for lazy versions) and some functions work with Text instead of String –
specifically, IO functions (readFile, putStrLn, etc) and show. In fact, show
is polymorphic and can produce strict or lazy Text, String, or ByteString.
Also, toText/toLText/toString can convert Text|LText|String types to
Text/LText/String. If you want to convert to and from ByteString use
encodeUtf8/decodeUtf8 functions.
The following parts of these two libraries are exported:
- Transformers:
State[T], Reader[T], ExceptT, MaybeT.
- Classes:
MonadReader, MonadState, MonadError.
Deepseq
deepseq is exported. For instance, if you want to force deep evaluation of
some value (in IO), you can write evaluateNF a. WHNF evaluation is possible
with evaluateWHNF a.
What's new? ↑
Finally, we can move to part describing the new cool features we bring with relude.
Available by default
-
Safe analogue for list functions: use viaNonEmpty function to get Maybe a.
viaNonEmpty head :: [a] -> Maybe a
-
uncons splits a list at the first element.
-
ordNub and sortNub are O(n log n) versions of nub (which is quadratic)
and hashNub and unstableNub are almost O(n) versions of nub.
-
(&) – reverse application. x & f & g instead of g $ f $ x is useful sometimes.
-
whenM, unlessM, ifM, guardM are available and do what you expect
them to do (e.g. whenM (doesFileExist "foo")).
-
General fold functions:
foldMapA :: (Monoid b, Applicative m, Foldable f) => (a -> m b) -> f a -> m b
foldMapM :: (Monoid b, Monad m, Foldable f) => (a -> m b) -> f a -> m b
-
readMaybe and readEither are like read but total and give either
Maybe or Either with parse error.
-
when(Just|Nothing|Left|Right|NotEmpty)[M][_]
let you conditionally execute something. Before:
case mbX of
Nothing -> return ()
Just x -> f x
After:
whenJust mbX $ \x ->
f x
-
for_ for loops. There's also forM_ but for_ looks a bit nicer.
for_ [1..10] $ \i -> do
...
-
andM, allM, anyM, orM are monadic version of corresponding functions from base.
-
Conversions between Either and Maybe like rightToMaybe and maybeToLeft
with clear semantic.
-
using(Reader|State)[T] functions as aliases for flip run(Reader|State)[T].
-
One type class
for creating singleton containers. Even monomorhpic ones like Text.
-
StaticMap and DynamicMaptype classes as a
general interface for Map-like data structures.
-
evaluateWHNF and evaluateNF functions as clearer and lifted aliases for
evaluate and evaluate . force.
-
MonadFail instance for Either.
Need to import explicitly
-
Convenient functions to work with (Bounded a, Enum a) types:
universe :: (Bounded a, Enum a) => [a: get all values of the type.
inverseMap :: (Bounded a, Enum a, Ord k) => (a -> k) -> k -> Maybe a: convert functions like show to parsers.
-
Nice helpers to deal with newtypes in a more pleasant way:
ghci> newtype Foo = Foo Bool deriving Show
ghci> under not (Foo True)
Foo False
-
Functions to operate with CallStack:
>>> foo :: HasCallStack => String; foo = ownName
>>> foo
"foo"
-
Foldable1 typeclass that contains generalized interface for folding
non-empty structures like NonEmpty.
-
Validation data type as an alternative to Either when you want to combine
all errors.
Explore Extra modules: Relude.Extra
Migration guide ↑
In order to replace default Prelude with relude you should start with instructions given in
get started section.
This section describes what you need to change to make your code compile with relude.
-
Enable -XOverloadedStrings extension by default for your project.
-
Since head, tail, last and init work for NonEmpty you should
refactor your code in one of the multiple ways described below:
- Change
[a] to NonEmpty a where it makes sense.
- Use functions which return
Maybe. There is the viaNonEmpty function for this.
And you can use it like viaNonEmpty last l.
tail is drop 1. It's almost never a good idea to use tail from Prelude.
- Add
import qualified Relude.Unsafe as Unsafe and replace function with qualified usage.
-
If you use fromJust or !! you should use them from import qualified Relude.Unsafe as Unsafe.
-
If you use foldr or forM_ or similar for something like Maybe a or
Either a b it's recommended to replace usages of such function with
monomorhpic alternatives:
-
Maybe
(?:) :: Maybe a -> a -> a
fromMaybe :: a -> Maybe a -> a
maybeToList :: Maybe a -> [a]
maybeToMonoid :: Monoid m => Maybe m -> m
maybe :: b -> (a -> b) -> Maybe a -> b
whenJust :: Applicative f => Maybe a -> (a -> f ()) -> f ()
whenJustM :: Monad m => m (Maybe a) -> (a -> m ()) -> m ()
-
Either
fromLeft :: a -> Either a b -> a
fromRight :: b -> Either a b -> b
either :: (a -> c) -> (b -> c) -> Either a b -> c
whenRight_ :: Applicative f => Either l r -> (r -> f ()) -> f ()
whenRightM_ :: Monad m => m (Either l r) -> (r -> m ()) -> m ()
-
Forget about String type.
- Replace
(++) with (<>) for String-like types.
- Try to use
fmt library if you need to construct messages.
- Use
toText/toLText/toString functions to convert to Text/LazyText/String types.
- Use
encodeUtf8/decodeUtf8 to convert to/from ByteString.
- Use
(putStr[Ln]|readFile|writeFile|appendFile)[Text|LText|BS|LBS] functions.
-
Run hlint using .hlint.yaml file from relude package to cleanup code and imports.
For Developers ↑
Generating .hlint.yaml
Note, that we are using custom hlint setting which are Relude specific. To
keep it up to date don't forget to reflect your changes in this file. We are
using Dhall to maintain the configurations. To use it follow the steps below.
First time:
$ cabal new-install dhall-json
Dhall 3.0.0 is required, so make sure that the previous command installed
dhall-json >= 1.2.4.
To generate hlint file:
$ dhall-to-yaml --omitNull <<< './hlint/hlint.dhall' > .hlint.yaml
Check that you have generated valid .hlint.yaml file without parse errors:
$ hlint test/Spec.hs
See our blog post where we describe the details of the implementation for this solution:
Acknowledgement
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