-- The below small example show how mighty Haskell's Typesystem -- actually is. -- For this demonstration, it uses Oleg Kiselyov, Ralf -- Laemmel and Keean Schupke heterogeneous collections. -- see: http://homepages.cwi.nl/~ralf/HList module Main where import Data.HList import Data.HList.Label2 import Data.HList.Record import Data.HList.GhcSyntax -- this is a polymorphic function, which selects an attribute from -- a record and prints it, as you can easily see, the function does -- not carry any information on the attributes, it selects. printAttribute record attribute = do print $ record # attribute return () -- this is the main function, applying printAttribute main = do -- first some record attributes are defined let attribOne = firstLabel "MyDomain" "attribOne description" let attribTwo = nextLabel attribOne "attribTwo description" let attribThree = nextLabel attribTwo "attribThree description" -- now, let's define a record which has content for attributes one and two let recordOneTwo = attribOne .=. 1 .*. attribTwo .=. "this is content for attrib 2" .*. emptyRecord -- and another record which is an exension and also has content for label three let recordOneTwoThree = hAppend recordOneTwo (attribThree .=. "does it print?" .*. emptyRecord) -- now, lets print some content from the records, works all fine printAttribute recordOneTwo attribOne -- prints "1" printAttribute recordOneTwo attribTwo -- prints "this is content for attrib 2" printAttribute recordOneTwoThree attribThree -- prints "does it print?" -- the next line cannot work, it selects attribThree from a record -- which is only containing attribOne and attribTwo. printAttribute recordOneTwo attribThree -- program does not compile, but compiles with above line commented! -- The interesting point here is, the compiler detects this, although the -- type of function printAttribute is polymorphic with regard to the different -- records. This is Haskell!
10/20/2012
The Power of Haskell's Typesystem
The title of this post could be also "Haskell's unknown record system", but it is
not about records, it's about the typesystem, which can do things, you would'nt
expect.
In the example below a program is written which defines records of different types, one record with two attributes, another one with three. Then a polymorphic function is defined, which prints one attribute. The nice thing: you can call this funtion on a record and request a label, which this record does not have.
What happens? See yourself.
This is the essence of "Haskell is a strictly typed language".
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