deepcontrol
A Haskell library that enables more deeper level style programming than the usual Control.xxx modules provide, especially for Applicative and Monad.
Installing with Stack
If you haven't installed Stack yet, install Stack.
If you have never even used Stack, launch the terminal and go to your working directory:
.../yourworkingdirectory$
To create your own Stack new project folder, type as below:
../yourworkingdirectory$ stack new yourproject simple
Downloading template "simple" to create project "yourproject" in yourproject/ ...
...
Go into your project folder:
../yourworkingdirectory$ cd yourproject/
To install GHC on your Stack project folder, type as below:
.../yourproject$ stack setup
stack will use a locally installed GHC
Now start ghci and see if it works well.
.../yourproject$ stack ghci
...
Prelude>
Add deepcontrol
to your .cabal file:
yourproject.cabal:
...
build-depends: ...
, deepcontrol
On your project folder run "stack build" to get Stack to install deepcontrol
into your project.
.../yourproject$ stack build
If Stack yields a messeage below, it means that deepcontrol
failed to be resolved on yourproject's Stack resolver.
Probably you will get this message since deepcontrol
is just one of miner libraries yet.
.../yourproject$ stack build
While constructing the BuildPlan the following exceptions were encountered:
...
If you want to try other resolver, type as below:
.../yourproject$ stack init
Refusing to overwrite existing stack.yaml, please delete before running stack init or if you are sure use "--force"
Please follow the message direction.
Ok, I(you) got deepcontrol
isn't in Stackage. Then let's fetch deepcontrol
from Hackage.
Add deepcontrol-0.3.2.0
to your extra-deps field in stack.yaml too:
stack.yaml:
extra-deps:
...
- deepcontrol-0.3.2.0
And type as below:
.../yourproject$ stack build
Stack must fetch and install deepcontrol
automatically.
../yourproject$ stack build
deepcontrol-0.3.2.0: configure
...
Now start ghci and see if it works well.
.../yourproject$ stack ghci
...
Prelude> :m DeepControl.Applicative
Installing with Cabal
deepcontrol
is available from
Hackage.
Launch the terminal and go to your project folder:
.../yourproject$
If you haven't done setup cabal sandbox on your project folder yet, type as below so that deepcontrol
will be installed locally on your project folder:
.../yourproject$ cabal sandbox init
Writing a default package environment file to
...
To install deepcontrol
on your project folder, type as below:
.../yourproject$ cabal update
Downloading the latest package list from hackage.haskell.org
...
.../yourproject$ cabal install deepcontrol
Resolving dependencies...
...
Now start ghci and see if it works well.
.../yourproject$ cabal repl
...
Prelude> :m DeepControl.Applicative
Examples
This module enables you to program in applicative style for more deeper level than the usual Applicative module expresses.
You would soon realize exactly what more deeper level means by reading the example codes below in order.
Prelude> :m DeepControl.Applicative
Level-0
bra-ket notation:
> (1+) |> 2
3
> 1 <| (+2)
3
> 1 <|(+)|> 2
3
> 1 <|(+)|> 2 <|(*)|> 3
9
> 1 <|(,)|> 2
(1,2)
Level-1
bra-ket notation:
> (1+) |$> [2]
[3]
> [1] <$| (+2)
[3]
> ("<"++)|$> ["a","b"] <$|(++">")
["<a>","<b>"]
> [(1+)] |*> [2]
[3]
> [1] <$|(+)|*> [2]
[3]
> [1] <$|(+)|*> [0,1,2]
[1,2,3]
> [0,1] <$|(+)|*> [2,3] <$|(+)|*> [4,5]
[6,7,7,8,7,8,8,9]
> foldr (\x acc -> x <$|(:)|*> acc) ((*:) []) [Just 1, Just 2, Just 3]
Just [1,2,3]
> foldr (\x acc -> x <$|(:)|*> acc) ((*:) []) [Just 1, Nothing, Just 3]
Nothing
> filter (even <$|(&&)|*> (10 >)) [1..100]
[2,4,6,8]
> filter (even <$|(&&)|*> (10 >) <$|(&&)|*> (5 <)) [1..100]
[6,8]
braket-cover notation
> [(1+)] |* 2
[3]
> [1] <$|(+)|* 2
[3]
> [1] <$|(+)|* 2 <$|(*)|* 3
[9]
> Just 1 <$|(,)|* 2
Just (1,2)
> 1 *| [(+2)]
[3]
> 1 *| [(+)] |* 2
[3]
> 1 *|[(+),(-),(*),(^)]|* 2
[3,-1,2,1]
> 1 *|Just (,)|* 2
Just (1,2)
Level-2
bra-ket notation:
> (+1) |$>> [[2]]
[[3]]
> [[2]] <<$| (+1)
[[3]]
> [Just 1] <<$|(+)|*>> [Just 2]
[Just 3]
> [Just 1] <<$|(,)|*>> [Just 2]
[Just (1,2)]
> [[1]] <<$|(+)|*>> [[2]] <<$|(-)|*>> [[3]]
[[0]]
> foldr (\n acc -> n <<$|(+)|*>> acc) ((**:) 0) [Right (Just 1), Right (Just 2), Right (Just 3)] :: Either () (Maybe Int)
Right (Just 6)
> foldr (\n acc -> n <<$|(+)|*>> acc) ((**:) 0) [Right (Just 1), Right Nothing, Right (Just 3)] :: Either () (Maybe Int)
Right Nothing
> foldr (\n acc -> n <<$|(+)|*>> acc) ((**:) 0) [Right (Just 1), Right Nothing, Left ()]
Left ()
braket-cover notation:
> [Just 1] <<$|(+)|** 2
[Just 3]
> 1 **|(+)|$>> [Just 2]
[Just 3]
> 1 **|[Just (+)]|** 2
[Just 3]
> 1 **|[Just (+), Just (-), Just (*), Nothing]|** 2
[Just 3,Just (-1),Just 2,Nothing]
> [Just 1] <<$|(+)|-* [2]
[Just 3]
> [Just 1] <<$|(+)|*- Just 2
[Just 3]
> [1] -*|(+)|$>> [Just 2]
[Just 3]
> Just 1 *-|(+)|$>> [Just 2]
[Just 3]
> Just 1 *-|[Just (+)]|** 2
[Just 3]
> Just 1 *-|[Just (+)]|*- Just 2
[Just 3]
> [1] -*|[Just (+)]|*- Just 2
[Just 3]
> [1] -*|[Just (+), Just (-), Just (*), Nothing]|*- Just 2
[Just 3,Just (-1),Just 2,Nothing]
> [0,1] -*|[Just (+), Just (-), Just (*), Nothing]|*- Just 2
[Just 2,Just 3,Just (-2),Just (-1),Just 0,Just 2,Nothing,Nothing]
Level-3
Work well likewise.
Level-4, Level-5
Not completely written up yet.
This module enables you to program in Monad for more deeper level than the usual Monad module expresses.
You would soon realize exactly what more deeper level means by reading the example codes below in order.
Level-2
import DeepControl.Applicative ((**:))
import DeepControl.Monad
listlist :: [[String]] -- List-List Monad
listlist = [["a","b"]] >>== \x ->
[[0],[1,2]] >>== \y ->
(**:) $ x ++ show y
-- > listlist
-- [["a0","b0"],["a0","b1","b2"],["a1","a2","b0"],["a1","a2","b1","b2"]]
import DeepControl.Applicative
import DeepControl.Monad
import DeepControl.Monad.Trans.Writer
factorial :: Int ->
Maybe (Writer [Int] Int) -- Maybe-Writer Monad
factorial n | n < 0 = (-*) Nothing
| n == 0 = (*:) $ tell [0] >> return 1
| n > 0 = factorial (n-1) >>== \v ->
tell [v] ->~
(**:) (n * v)
-- > runWriter |$> factorial 5
-- Just (120,[0,1,1,2,6,24])
Level-3
import DeepControl.Applicative
import DeepControl.Monad
import DeepControl.Monad.Trans.Writer
factorial :: Int ->
IO (Maybe (Writer [Int] Int)) -- IO-Maybe-Writer Monad
factorial n | n < 0 = (*-*) Nothing
| n == 0 = (**:) $ tell [0] >> return 1
| n > 0 = factorial (n-1) >>>== \v ->
print v >--~
tell [v] -->~
(***:) (n * v)
-- > runWriter |$>> factorial 5
-- 1
-- 1
-- 2
-- 6
-- 24
-- Just (120,[0,1,1,2,6,24])
Level-2
Here is a monad transformer example how to implement Ackermann function, improved to stop within a certain limit of time, with ReaderT2-IO-Maybe monad, a level-2 monad-transformation.
import DeepControl.Applicative
import DeepControl.Commutative (commute)
import DeepControl.Monad ((>-))
import DeepControl.Monad.Trans (lift2, transfold2, untransfold2)
import DeepControl.Monad.Trans.Reader
import Control.Monad.Trans.Maybe
import System.Timeout (timeout)
type TimeLimit = Int
ackermannTimeLimit :: TimeLimit -> Int -> Int
-> IO (Maybe Int) -- IO-Maybe Monad
ackermannTimeLimit timelimit x y = timeout timelimit (ackermannIO x y)
where
ackermannIO :: Int -> Int -> IO Int
ackermannIO 0 n = (*:) $ n + 1
ackermannIO m n | m > 0 && n == 0 = ackermannIO (m-1) 1
| m > 0 && n > 0 = ackermannIO m (n-1) >>= ackermannIO (m-1)
ackermann :: Int -> Int ->
ReaderT2 TimeLimit IO Maybe Int -- ReaderT2-IO-Maybe monad
ackermann x y = do
timelimit <- ask
lift2 $ ackermannTimeLimit timelimit x y -- lift IO-Maybe function to ReaderT2-IO-Maybe function
calc_ackermann :: TimeLimit -> Int -> Int -> IO (Maybe Int)
calc_ackermann timelimit x y = ackermann x y >- \r -> runReaderT2 r timelimit
-- λ> commute $ calc_ackermann 1000 |$> [0..4] |* 4
-- [Just 5,Just 6,Just 11,Just 125,Nothing]
ackermann' :: Int -> Int ->
ReaderT TimeLimit (MaybeT IO) Int -- ReaderT-MaybeT-IO monad
ackermann' x y = transfold2 $ ackermann x y -- You can get usual ReaderT-MaybeT-IO function from ReaderT2-IO-Maybe function
ackermann'' :: Int -> Int ->
ReaderT2 TimeLimit IO Maybe Int -- ReaderT2-IO-Maybe monad
ackermann'' x y = untransfold2 $ ackermann' x y -- You can get ReaderT2-IO-Maybe function from usual ReaderT-MaybeT-IO function
Here is a monad transformer example showing that the Monad Morphic programming is usable.
import DeepControl.Applicative ((|$>))
import DeepControl.Monad (Monad2)
import DeepControl.Monad.Trans (lift, (|*|), (|-*|), (|*-|))
import DeepControl.Monad.Trans.State
import DeepControl.Monad.Trans.Writer
tick :: State Int ()
tick = modify (+1)
tock :: StateT Int IO ()
tock = do
(|*|) tick :: (Monad m) => StateT Int m ()
lift $ putStrLn "Tock!" :: (MonadTrans t) => t IO ()
-- λ> runStateT tock 0
-- Tock!
-- ((),1)
save :: StateT Int (Writer [Int]) ()
save = do
n <- get
lift $ tell [n]
program :: StateT2 Int IO (Writer [Int]) ()
program = replicateM_ 4 $ do
(|-*|) tock
:: (Monad2 m) => StateT2 Int IO m ()
(|*-|) save
:: (Monad m) => StateT2 Int m (Writer [Int]) ()
-- λ> execWriter |$> runStateT2 program 0
-- Tock!
-- Tock!
-- Tock!
-- Tock!
-- [1,2,3,4]
Level-3
Work well likewise.
Here is a monad-morph example, a level-2 monad-morph.
import DeepControl.Monad.Morph
import DeepControl.Monad.Trans.State
import DeepControl.Monad.Trans.Writer
-- i.e. :: StateT Int Identity ()
tick :: State Int ()
tick = modify (+1)
tock :: StateT Int IO ()
tock = do
generalize |>| tick :: (Monad m) => StateT Int m ()
lift $ putStrLn "Tock!" :: (MonadTrans t) => t IO ()
-- λ> runStateT tock 0
-- Tock!
-- ((),1)
-- i.e. :: StateT Int (WriterT [Int] Identity) ()
save :: StateT Int (Writer [Int]) ()
save = do
n <- get
lift $ tell [n]
program :: StateT Int (WriterT [Int] IO) ()
program = replicateM_ 4 $ do
lift |>| tock
:: (MonadTrans t) => StateT Int (t IO) ()
generalize |>>| save
:: (Monad m) => StateT Int (WriterT [Int] m ) ()
-- λ> execWriterT (runStateT program 0)
-- Tock!
-- Tock!
-- Tock!
-- Tock!
-- [1,2,3,4]