Disambiguate obvious uses of effects.
Please see the README on GitHub at https://github.com/polysemy-research/polysemy/tree/master/polysemy-plugin#readme
polysemy-plugin
Dedication
It doesn't matter how beautiful your theory is, it doesn't matter how smart you are. If it doesn't agree with experiment, it's wrong.
Richard Feynman
Overview
A typechecker plugin that can disambiguate "obvious" uses of effects in polysemy
.
Example
Consider the following program:
foo :: Member (State Int) r => Sem r ()
foo = put 10
What does this program do? Any human will tell you that it changes the state of the Int
to 10, which is clearly what's meant.
Unfortunately, polysemy
can't work this out on its own. Its reasoning is "maybe you wanted to change some other State
effect which is also a Num
, but you just forgot to add a Member
constraint for it."
This is obviously insane, but it's the way the cookie crumbles. polysemy-plugin
is a typechecker plugin which will disambiguate the above program (and others) so the compiler will do what you want.
Usage
Add the following line to your package configuration:
ghc-options: -fplugin=Polysemy.Plugin
Limitations
The polysemy-plugin
will only disambiguate effects if there is exactly one relevant constraint in scope. For example, it will not disambiguate the following program:
bar :: Members '[ State Int
, State Double
] r => Sem r ()
bar = put 10
because it is now unclear whether you're attempting to set the Int
or the Double
. Instead, you can manually write a type application in this case.
bar :: Members '[ State Int
, State Double
] r => Sem r ()
bar = put @Int 10
Acknowledgments
This plugin is copied almost verbatim from simple-effects
.