A better, more type-safe Enum.
Provides a type class witnessing that a type has finitely-many inhabitants, as well as its cardinality. Also provides an auto-deriving framework using GHC Generics, together with a range of instances for existing types.
finitary
What's all this about?
finitary
allows us to specify that a type is finite (that is, contains finitely many inhabitants which are not _|_
), and have confirmation of this fact by GHC. Additionally, it offers a Generics
-based auto-derivation interface for this, as well as multiple helper functions that are enabled by all this machinery.
Why is this a big deal?
Consider Enum
. It's not difficult to see that Enum
has issues:
It's partial all over the place
What will this code do?
toEnum 3 :: Bool
The answer is 'a runtime error'. How about this?
succ True
The answer, again, is 'a runtime error'. Many of the methods provided by Enum
are partial like this, because many types that happen to be Enum
instances have cardinalities (much) smaller than Int
, which necessitates leaving some Int
values 'out'.
The converse is not much better: on some platforms, Int
has smaller cardinality than some types with Enum
instances in base
. For example, on a platform where Int
is 32 bits wide, the Word64
instance will definitely cause problems, as it's 'too big'.
It gives us almost no information
An Enum
instance says that a type can be munged to and from an Int
... somehow. While base
and the Haskell Report certainly provide some limits on its behaviour, a lot of questions remain unanswered, including:
- How many inhabitants does this type have?
- What are the 'safe' values of
Int
I can feed totoEnum
? - For any
x
, istoEnum . (+ 1) . fromEnum $ x
safe (in that it'll give us a value instead of blowing up)?
We don't have a (default) way to auto-derive it
Quoting base
:
Instances of
Enum
may be derived for any enumeration type (types whose constructors have no fields).
But what if your type has fields, especially when they're instances of Enum
? Unfortunately, no auto-derivation for you. While this stance makes some sense, it's still rather inconvenient.
OK, so what are you offering instead?
The core of finitary
is the Finitary
type class. If we have an instance of Finitary
for some type a
, we have a witness to an isomorphism between a
and some (KnownNat n) => Finite n
. More precisely, we (together with GHC) know:
- That
a
has finitely-many non-_|_
inhabitants - The value of
n
, which is the cardinality ofa
(how many inhabitants we have exactly) - Two functions to 'witness' the isomorphism, namely
fromFinite :: Finite n -> a
andtoFinite :: a -> Finite n
How does Finitary
solve the issues behind Enum
?
Everything is total, forever
There is no way to call fromFinite
or toFinite
with an 'inappropriate' argument. We always know - if you give me a Finite n
, I will give you back a (unique) a
, guaranteed.
We learn a lot from a type having a Finitary
instance
Aside from cardinality, we also inherently get the ability to:
- Have a 'starting' and 'ending' value (assuming the cardinality of the type isn't zero); and
- Get the 'next' or 'previous' value, or report that it doesn't exist.
All of this is safe, total and can be relied upon. Check out the documentation for more details - all of this functionality is provided. We also have functions to help enumerate values of Finitary
types.
But what about auto-derivation?
We have you covered. If you want to auto-derive an instance of Finitary
for your type, you absolutely can, using the power of GHC.Generics
:
{-# LANGUAGE DataKinds #-}
{-# LANGUAGE DeriveAnyClass #-}
{-# LANGUAGE DeriveGeneric #-}
{-# LANGUAGE DerivingStrategies #-}
import Data.Finitary (Finitary)
import Data.Vector.Sized (Vector)
import Data.Word (Word8)
import GHC.Generics (Generic)
data Foo = Bar | Baz (Word8, Word8) | Quux (Vector 4 Bool)
deriving stock (Eq, Generic)
deriving anyclass (Finitary)
Furthermore, GHC will even calculate the cardinality for you. To assist in this, we have provided as many instances of Finitary
for 'base' types as possible - see the documentation for full details.
That all seems rather cool - what else can I do with this?
Knowing that a type has finite cardinality is usable for many things - all of which we plan to provide. Some examples (with links once we have working, tested code) include:
- Automatic derivation of instances
- Type-safe refinement
- Random generation and stream sampling
- Efficient sets, allowing operations like complements and a
Monoid
under intersection - Efficient maps
- Various clever
lens
tricks
If there's something else interesting you think can be done with this, let us know: it might make it onto this list, and into code.
License
This library is under the GNU General Public License, version 3 or later (SPDX code GPL-3.0-or-later
). For more details, see the LICENSE.md
file.