Difference between revisions of "GHC/Kinds"

From HaskellWiki
< GHC
Jump to navigation Jump to search
(Remove the branch story)
Line 21: Line 21:
 
== How do I use it? ==
 
== How do I use it? ==
   
You first need to [http://hackage.haskell.org/trac/ghc/wiki/Building get the sources] and checkout the branch:
+
Simply [http://hackage.haskell.org/trac/ghc/wiki/Building build GHC HEAD].
 
$ git clone http://darcs.haskell.org/ghc.git ghc-kinds
 
$ cd ghc-kinds
 
$ ./sync-all --testsuite get
 
$ ./sync-all checkout ghc-kinds
 
 
Make sure you are up-to-date:
 
 
$ ./sync-all pull
 
 
You can now build the compiler:
 
$ perl boot
 
$ ./configure
 
$ make
 
Or run the testsuite:
 
$ sh validate
 
 
In both cases the resulting compiler will be located at <code>inplace/bin/ghc-stage2</code>.
 
   
 
== Which data types are promotable? ==
 
== Which data types are promotable? ==

Revision as of 16:28, 28 November 2011

Kinds (this is not the definitive name) will be a language extension adding a kind level and some kind polymorphic support to Haskell.

What does this extension do?

Haskell defines kinds as κ ::= * | κ -> κ. Nowadays, programmers use type-level computation more often using GADTs and type families. The need of a well-kinded type-level computation has become bigger. This extension provides a simple mechanism called promotion to populate the kind level.

Each time the user defines a promotable data type at the term level, he will be able to use it at the type level too. For instance, the user can write the following example:

data Nat = Zero | Succ Nat
data Vector :: * -> Nat -> * where
  VNil :: Vector a Zero
  VCons :: a -> Vector a n -> Vector a (Succ n)

data List a = Nil | Cons a (List a)
data HList :: List * -> * where
  HNil :: HList Nil
  HCons :: a -> HList as -> HList (Cons a as)

How do I use it?

Simply build GHC HEAD.

Which data types are promotable?

A data type is promotable if its type constructor and data constructors are. A type constructor is promotable if it is of the form * -> .. * -> * which is a first-order Haskell98 type constructor. All Haskell98 data constructors of a first-order Haskell98 data type are promotable. More details can be found in this paper.

A simple way to decide if your data type is promotable is to see if you can write without the where-clause like this:

data T (a::*) (b::*) (c::*) = A a | B Int b | C (Either a c) [b]