Existential type
From HaskellWiki
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(Existential types in Essential Haskell. Comparisons to Haskell.) |
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See the [http://www.cs.uu.nl/wiki/Ehc/#On_EHC documentation on EHC], each paper at the ''Version 4'' part: | See the [http://www.cs.uu.nl/wiki/Ehc/#On_EHC documentation on EHC], each paper at the ''Version 4'' part: | ||
| - | * Chapter 8 (EH4) of Atze Dijksta's [http://www.cs.uu.nl/groups/ST/Projects/ehc/ehc-book.pdf | + | * Chapter 8 (EH4) of Atze Dijksta's [http://www.cs.uu.nl/groups/ST/Projects/ehc/ehc-book.pdf Essential Haskell PhD thesis] (most recent version). A detailed explanation. It explains also that existential types can be expressed in Haskell, but their use is restricted to data declarations, and the notation (using keyword <hask>forall</hask>) may be confusing. In Essential Haskell, existential types can occur not only in data declarations, and a separate keyword <hask>exists</hask> is used for their notation. |
* [http://www.cs.uu.nl/wiki/pub/Ehc/WebHome/20050107-eh-intro.pdf Essential Haskell Compiler overview] | * [http://www.cs.uu.nl/wiki/pub/Ehc/WebHome/20050107-eh-intro.pdf Essential Haskell Compiler overview] | ||
* [http://www.cs.uu.nl/wiki/Ehc/Examples#EH_4_forall_and_exists_everywher Examples] | * [http://www.cs.uu.nl/wiki/Ehc/Examples#EH_4_forall_and_exists_everywher Examples] | ||
[[Category:Idioms]] | [[Category:Idioms]] | ||
Revision as of 17:49, 2 May 2006
Contents |
1 Dynamic dispatch mechanism of OOP
Existential types in conjunction with type classes can be used to emulate the dynamic dispatch mechanism of object oriented programming languages. To illustrate this concept I show how a classic example from object oriented programming can be encoded in Haskell.
class Shape_ a where perimeter :: a -> Double area :: a -> Double data Shape = forall a. Shape_ a => Shape a type Radius = Double type Side = Double data Circle = Circle Radius data Rectangle = Rectangle Side Side data Square = Square Side instance Shape_ Circle where perimeter (Circle r) = 2 * pi * r area (Circle r) = pi * r * r instance Shape_ Rectangle where perimeter (Rectangle x y) = 2*(x + y) area (Rectangle x y) = x * y instance Shape_ Square where perimeter (Square s) = 4*s area (Square s) = s*s instance Shape_ Shape where perimeter (Shape shape) = perimeter shape area (Shape shape) = area shape -- -- Smart constructor -- circle :: Radius -> Shape circle r = Shape (Circle r) rectangle :: Side -> Side -> Shape rectangle x y = Shape (Rectangle x y) square :: Side -> Shape square s = Shape (Square s) shapes :: [Shape] shapes = [circle 2.4, rectangle 3.1 4.4, square 2.1]
See also the concept of Smart constructor.
2 Generalised algebraic datatype
The type of the parser for this GADT is a good example to illustrate the concept of existential type.
3 Examples from the Essential Haskell Compiler project
See the documentation on EHC, each paper at the Version 4 part:
- Chapter 8 (EH4) of Atze Dijksta's Essential Haskell PhD thesis (most recent version). A detailed explanation. It explains also that existential types can be expressed in Haskell, but their use is restricted to data declarations, and the notation (using keyword ) may be confusing. In Essential Haskell, existential types can occur not only in data declarations, and a separate keywordforallis used for their notation.exists
- Essential Haskell Compiler overview
- Examples
