ghc-7.2.2: The GHC API

Coercion

Contents

Description

Module for (a) type kinds and (b) type coercions, as used in System FC. See CoreSyn.Expr for more on System FC and how coercions fit into it.

Synopsis

Main data type

data Var Source

Essentially a typed Name, that may also contain some additional information about the Var and it's use sites.

Deconstructing Kinds

kindFunResult :: Kind -> KindSource

Essentially funResultTy on kinds

synTyConResKind :: TyCon -> KindSource

Find the result Kind of a type synonym, after applying it to its arity number of type variables Actually this function works fine on data types too, but they'd always return *, so we never need to ask

splitKindFunTys :: Kind -> ([Kind], Kind)Source

Essentially splitFunTys on kinds

splitKindFunTysN :: Int -> Kind -> ([Kind], Kind)Source

Essentially splitFunTysN on kinds

Predicates on Kinds

isUbxTupleKind, isUnliftedTypeKind, isArgTypeKind, isOpenTypeKind :: Kind -> BoolSource

See Type for details of the distinction between these Kinds

isKind :: Kind -> BoolSource

Is this a kind (i.e. a type-of-types)?

isTySuperKind :: SuperKind -> BoolSource

isSuperKind :: Type -> BoolSource

Is this a super-kind (i.e. a type-of-kinds)?

mkArrowKind :: Kind -> Kind -> KindSource

Given two kinds k1 and k2, creates the Kind k1 -> k2

mkArrowKinds :: [Kind] -> Kind -> KindSource

Iterated application of mkArrowKind

isSubArgTypeKind :: Kind -> BoolSource

True of any sub-kind of ArgTypeKind

isSubOpenTypeKind :: Kind -> BoolSource

True of any sub-kind of OpenTypeKind (i.e. anything except arrow)

isSubKind :: Kind -> Kind -> BoolSource

k1 `isSubKind` k2 checks that k1 <: k2

defaultKind :: Kind -> KindSource

Used when generalising: default kind ? and ?? to *. See Type for more information on what that means

isSubKindCon :: TyCon -> TyCon -> BoolSource

kc1 `isSubKindCon` kc2 checks that kc1 <: kc2

mkCoType :: Type -> Type -> TypeSource

Makes a coercion type from two types: the types whose equality is proven by the relevant Coercion

coercionKind :: Coercion -> Pair TypeSource

If it is the case that

 c :: (t1 ~ t2)

i.e. the kind of c relates t1 and t2, then coercionKind c = Pair t1 t2.

Constructing coercions

mkSymCo :: Coercion -> CoercionSource

Create a symmetric version of the given Coercion that asserts equality between the same types but in the other direction, so a kind of t1 ~ t2 becomes the kind t2 ~ t1.

mkTransCo :: Coercion -> Coercion -> CoercionSource

Create a new Coercion by composing the two given Coercions transitively.

mkInstCo :: Coercion -> Type -> CoercionSource

Instantiates a Coercion with a Type argument.

mkTyConAppCo :: TyCon -> [Coercion] -> CoercionSource

Apply a type constructor to a list of coercions.

mkFunCo :: Coercion -> Coercion -> CoercionSource

Make a function Coercion between two other Coercions

mkForAllCo :: Var -> Coercion -> CoercionSource

Make a Coercion which binds a variable within an inner Coercion

mkUnsafeCo :: Type -> Type -> CoercionSource

Manufacture a coercion from thin air. Needless to say, this is not usually safe, but it is used when we know we are dealing with bottom, which is one case in which it is safe. This is also used to implement the unsafeCoerce# primitive. Optimise by pushing down through type constructors.

mkNewTypeCo :: Name -> TyCon -> [TyVar] -> Type -> CoAxiomSource

Create a coercion constructor (axiom) suitable for the given newtype TyCon. The Name should be that of a new coercion CoAxiom, the TyVars the arguments expected by the newtype and the type the appropriate right hand side of the newtype, with the free variables a subset of those TyVars.

mkFamInstCoSource

Arguments

:: Name

Unique name for the coercion tycon

-> [TyVar]

Type parameters of the coercion (tvs)

-> TyCon

Family tycon (F)

-> [Type]

Type instance (ts)

-> TyCon

Representation tycon (R)

-> CoAxiom

Coercion constructor (Co)

Create a coercion identifying a data, newtype or type representation type and its family instance. It has the form Co tvs :: F ts ~ R tvs, where Co is the coercion constructor built here, F the family tycon and R the (derived) representation tycon.

Decomposition

splitNewTypeRepCo_maybe :: Type -> Maybe (Type, Coercion)Source

Sometimes we want to look through a newtype and get its associated coercion. This function only strips *one layer* of newtype off, so the caller will usually call itself recursively. Furthermore, this function should only be applied to types of kind *, hence the newtype is always saturated. If co : ty ~ ty' then:

 splitNewTypeRepCo_maybe ty = Just (ty', co)

The function returns Nothing for non-newtypes or fully-transparent newtypes.

instNewTyCon_maybe :: TyCon -> [Type] -> Maybe (Type, Coercion)Source

If co :: T ts ~ rep_ty then:

 instNewTyCon_maybe T ts = Just (rep_ty, co)

decomposeCo :: Arity -> Coercion -> [Coercion]Source

This breaks a Coercion with type T A B C ~ T D E F into a list of Coercions of kinds A ~ D, B ~ E and E ~ F. Hence:

 decomposeCo 3 c = [nth 0 c, nth 1 c, nth 2 c]

getCoVar_maybe :: Coercion -> Maybe CoVarSource

Attempts to obtain the type variable underlying a Coercion

splitTyConAppCo_maybe :: Coercion -> Maybe (TyCon, [Coercion])Source

Attempts to tease a coercion apart into a type constructor and the application of a number of coercion arguments to that constructor

splitAppCo_maybe :: Coercion -> Maybe (Coercion, Coercion)Source

Attempt to take a coercion application apart.

Coercion variables

Free variables

Substitution

type CvSubstEnv = VarEnv CoercionSource

A substitution of Coercions for CoVars (OR TyVars, when doing a "lifting" substitution)

substCo :: CvSubst -> Coercion -> CoercionSource

Substitute within a Coercion

substCos :: CvSubst -> [Coercion] -> [Coercion]Source

Substitute within several Coercions

Lifting

liftCoMatch :: TyVarSet -> Type -> Coercion -> Maybe CvSubstSource

liftCoMatch is sort of inverse to liftCoSubst. In particular, if liftCoMatch vars ty co == Just s, then tyCoSubst s ty == co. That is, it matches a type against a coercion of the same shape, and returns a lifting substitution which could have been used to produce the given coercion from the given type.

liftCoSubst :: CvSubst -> Type -> CoercionSource

The "lifting" operation which substitutes coercions for type variables in a type to produce a coercion.

For the inverse operation, see liftCoMatch

Comparison

coreEqCoercion :: Coercion -> Coercion -> BoolSource

Determines syntactic equality of coercions

Forcing evaluation of coercions

Pretty-printing

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