linear-generics: Generic programming library with linearity support
This package offers a version of
GHC.Generics
with two important improvements:
The to, from, to1, and from1 methods have multiplicity-polymorphic
types, allowing them to be used with either traditional Haskell code or
linearly typed code.
The representations used for Generic1 are modified slightly.
Composition associates to the left in the generic representation. As a result,
to1 and from1 never need to use fmap. This can
greatly improve performance,
and it is necessary to support multiplicity polymorphism,
as discussed here.
Generic representations no longer use Rec1 f, they use Par1 :.: f instead,
as proposed by spl.
This way you no longer need to write Rec1 instances for your derivers.
For more details, see the Generics.Linear documentation.
This library is organized as follows:
Generics.Linear defines the core functionality for generics. This includes:
multiplicity polymorphic Generic and Generic1 classes,
a replacement for the :.: composition type, and
an MP1 type for nonlinear and multiplicity polymorphic fields.
Generics.Linear.TH implements Template Haskell functionality for
deriving instances of Generic(1).
Generics.Linear.Unsafe.ViaGHCGenerics offers DerivingVia targets to
derive both Generic and Generic1 instances from GHC.Generics.Generic.
Because these instances necessarily use unsafe coercions, their
use will likely inhibit full optimization of code using them (see
this wiki page
for more on the GHC internals, along with commentary in Unsafe.Coerce).
Educational code: the educational modules exported by
generic-deriving
have been copied into the tests/Generic/Deriving directory
in this repository, with the very few modifications required to
accommodate the differences between the Generic1 representations
here and in base. All the same caveats apply as in the originals;
see that package’s README.
Changes
0.2.1
Add a Generic instance for Data.Void.Void.
0.2
The Generic1 instance for Generically1 no longer uses
GHC.Generics.Generic1; it now uses GHC.Generics.Generic instead. This
allows far more instances to be derived.
0.1.0.1
Make Generic1 deriving properly polykinded. There was an old kind check
that has not been valid for a long time.