Data structures for describing changes to other data structures.
Data structures for describing changes to other data structures.
In this library, a patch is something which can be applied, analogous to a function, and which distinguishes returning the argument it was provided from returning something else.
patch
Data structures for describing changes to other data structures.
A Patch
type represents a kind of change made to a data structure.
class Patch p where
type PatchTarget p :: *
-- | Apply the patch p a to the value a. If no change is needed, return
-- 'Nothing'.
apply :: p -> PatchTarget p -> Maybe (PatchTarget p)
Patching Maps
For example, Data.Patch.Map
defines the PatchMap
type which can be used to patch Map
s. A PatchMap
represents updates to a Map
that can insert, remove, or replace items in the Map
. In this example, the Map
is the PatchTarget
and the PatchMap
is the Patch
. Keep in mind that there are many other possible Patch
es that can be applied to a Map
(i.e., Map
can be the PatchTarget
for many different Patch
instances).
PatchMap
is defined as:
newtype PatchMap k v = PatchMap { unPatchMap :: Map k (Maybe v) }
The Maybe
around the value is used to represent insertion/updates or deletion of the element at a given key.
Its Patch
instance begins with:
instance Ord k => Patch (PatchMap k v) where
type PatchTarget (PatchMap k v) = Map k v
...
When a PatchMap
is applied to its PatchTarget
, the following changes can occur:
If the key is present in the
Patch
and thePatchTarget
...And the
Patch
value at that key isNothing
: delete that key from thePatchTarget
.And the
Patch
value at that key isJust x
: update the value at that key in thePatchTarget
tox
.
If the key is present in the
Patch
and not present in thePatchTarget
...And the
Patch
value at that key isNothing
: do nothing because we're trying to delete a key that doesn't exist in the target in the first place.And the
Patch
value at that key isJust x
: insert the key and the valuex
into thePatchTarget
If the key is not present in the
Patch
but present in thePatchTarget
: do nothing.
There are, of course, more complicated ways of patching maps involving, for example, moving values from one key to another. You can find the code for that in Data.Patch.PatchMapWithMove
. Note that the PatchTarget
type associated with the PatchMapWithMove
patch instance is still Map k v
!