generics-sop-0.2.2.0: Generic Programming using True Sums of Products

Safe HaskellNone
LanguageHaskell2010

Generics.SOP.Dict

Description

Explicit dictionaries.

When working with compound constraints such as constructed using All or All2, GHC cannot always prove automatically what one would expect to hold.

This module provides a way of explicitly proving conversions between such constraints to GHC. Such conversions still have to be manually applied.

This module is new and experimental in generics-sop 0.2. It is therefore not yet exported via the main module and has to be imported explicitly. Its interface is to be considered even less stable than that of the rest of the library. Feedback is very welcome though.

Synopsis

Documentation

data Dict c a where Source #

An explicit dictionary carrying evidence of a class constraint.

The constraint parameter is separated into a second argument so that Dict c is of the correct kind to be used directly as a parameter to e.g. NP.

Since: 0.2

Constructors

Dict :: c a => Dict c a 

pureAll :: SListI xs => Dict (All Top) xs Source #

A proof that the trivial constraint holds over all type-level lists.

Since: 0.2

pureAll2 :: All SListI xss => Dict (All2 Top) xss Source #

A proof that the trivial constraint holds over all type-level lists of lists.

Since: 0.2

mapAll :: forall c d xs. (forall a. Dict c a -> Dict d a) -> Dict (All c) xs -> Dict (All d) xs Source #

Lifts a dictionary conversion over a type-level list.

Since: 0.2

mapAll2 :: forall c d xss. (forall a. Dict c a -> Dict d a) -> Dict (All2 c) xss -> Dict (All2 d) xss Source #

Lifts a dictionary conversion over a type-level list of lists.

Since: 0.2

zipAll :: Dict (All c) xs -> Dict (All d) xs -> Dict (All (c `And` d)) xs Source #

If two constraints c and d hold over a type-level list xs, then the combination of both constraints holds over that list.

Since: 0.2

zipAll2 :: All SListI xss => Dict (All2 c) xss -> Dict (All2 d) xss -> Dict (All2 (c `And` d)) xss Source #

If two constraints c and d hold over a type-level list of lists xss, then the combination of both constraints holds over that list of lists.

Since: 0.2

unAll_NP :: forall c xs. Dict (All c) xs -> NP (Dict c) xs Source #

If we have a constraint c that holds over a type-level list xs, we can create a product containing proofs that each individual list element satisfies c.

Since: 0.2

unAll_POP :: forall c xss. Dict (All2 c) xss -> POP (Dict c) xss Source #

If we have a constraint c that holds over a type-level list of lists xss, we can create a product of products containing proofs that all the inner elements satisfy c.

Since: 0.2

all_NP :: NP (Dict c) xs -> Dict (All c) xs Source #

If we have a product containing proofs that each element of xs satisfies c, then 'All c' holds for xs.

Since: 0.2

all_POP :: SListI xss => POP (Dict c) xss -> Dict (All2 c) xss Source #

If we have a product of products containing proofs that each inner element of xss satisfies c, then 'All2 c' holds for xss.

Since: 0.2

unAll2 :: Dict (All2 c) xss -> Dict (All (All c)) xss Source #

The constraint 'All2 c' is convertible to 'All (All c)'.

Since: 0.2

all2 :: Dict (All (All c)) xss -> Dict (All2 c) xss Source #

The constraint 'All (All c)' is convertible to 'All2 c'.

Since: 0.2

withDict :: Dict c a -> (c a => r) -> r Source #

If we have an explicit dictionary, we can unwrap it and pass a function that makes use of it.

Since: 0.2