do-list  
 
Do notation for free.
Summary
do-list makes it easy to use do notation. You can construct lists or monoids using DoList or DoMonoid modules respectively. do-list is designed to work well with OverloadedStrings and OverloadedLists extensions. See examples.
As alternative there is a canonical Writer without overloading support.
Examples
Benchmarks
{-# LANGUAGE OverloadedLists #-}
module Main (main) where
import Criterion.Main
import Data.DoList (DoList, item, toList)
main :: IO ()
main = defaultMain $ toList $ do
  doBench "add"  $ whnf (2 +) (1 :: Int)
  doBench "sub" $ whnf (2 -) (1 :: Int)
  -- Regular criterion benchmarks are injected via list overloading
  [multBench, divBench]
multBench, divBench :: Benchmark
multBench = bench "mult" $ whnf (2 *) (2 :: Int)
divBench = bench "div" $ whnf (2 `div`) (2 :: Int)
-- Now we can define benchmarks with do notation.
doBench :: String -> Benchmarkable -> DoList Benchmark
doBench name = item . bench name
Multiline Text
{-# LANGUAGE OverloadedStrings #-}
{-# OPTIONS_GHC -fno-warn-unused-do-bind #-}
module Main (main) where
import Data.DoMonoid (runDoM)
import Data.Text.IO as T (putStr)
main :: IO ()
main = T.putStr $ runDoM $ do
  -- Lines are combined using Text.append
  "fib 0 = 0\n"
  "fib 1 = 1\n"
  "fib n = fib (n-1) + fib (n-2)\n"
Indentation
{-# LANGUAGE OverloadedStrings #-}
{-# OPTIONS_GHC -fno-warn-unused-do-bind #-}
module Main (main) where
import Data.DoList (DoList, fromList, toList)
import Data.Text as T (Text, append, unlines)
import Data.Text.IO as T (putStr)
main :: IO ()
main = T.putStr $ T.unlines $ toList $ do
  "Here goes indented list:"
  indent $ do
    "1. Item 1"
    indent $ do
      "* Item a"
      "* Item b"
    "2. Item 2"
    "3. Item 3"
indent :: DoList Text -> DoList Text
-- fromList and toList are no-ops
indent = fromList . map (append "  ") . toList