Haddock/Development ideas
From HaskellWiki
There would be a number of benefits if GHC's parser were extended to understand the Haddock documentation markup and then Haddock changed to use the GHC API:
- Haddock would get full support for GHC's various syntactic extensions.
- Haddock would understand
{#- LINE -#}pragmas which would allow it to generate links to the original source code. - Haddock would get much better error messages.
- Haddock could infer types for functions with no explicit type signature.
- GHCi and IDEs like hIDE and Visual Haskell would be able to display API documentation in more convenient ways like in this Haste] screenshot:
- Haddock could accept module parameters with space after "-- #" ("-- #hide" is accepted nowadays, but "-- # hide" not)
- It would be good to have a recursive flag that would operate on all the .hs and .lhs files under a single directory.
- Haddock should emit the documentation about instances. For example, it's important to document that the Data.Map instance of Foldable only folds over the values and not the keys.
- There should be an annotation to include a function's entire definition in the documentation. This would be useful for functions like and(.)where the definition is the clearest possible documentation, and for QuickCheck properties that specify the behavior of a library.mapM
- There should be an option to include a simplified implementation of a function that is equivalent to the one in the code. For instance, instead of showing a complex implementation of List.length that makes use of stream fusion we could show a simple one based on foldl'.
- Optionally show qualifications of identifiers, that is print rather thanSequence.map,maprather than justMusic.T. The option for haddock could beT
--qualification QUAL-
none(default) strip off qualification (just)map -
origshow the identifiers as they are written in the module (e.g.ormap)List.map -
fullshow all identifiers with full qualification ()Data.List.map
-
- It should be possible to document parameters of function arguments.
fix :: ( a {- ^ local argument -} -> a {- ^ local output -} ) -> a {- ^ global output -}
- This is also of interest for other type constructors like the pair type constructor .(,)

