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  1. (<$!!>) :: (Monad m, NFData b) => (a -> b) -> m a -> m b

    deepseq Control.DeepSeq

    Deeply strict version of <$>.

  2. (>$) :: Contravariant f => b -> f b -> f a

    lens Control.Lens.Combinators

    Replace all locations in the output with the same value. The default definition is contramap . const, but this may be overridden with a more efficient version.

  3. (>$) :: Contravariant f => b -> f b -> f a

    lens Control.Lens.Getter

    Replace all locations in the output with the same value. The default definition is contramap . const, but this may be overridden with a more efficient version.

  4. (<$$>) :: Stream s Identity tok => (a -> b) -> Parsec s st a -> StreamPermParser s st b

    parsec Text.Parsec.Perm

    The expression f <$$> p creates a fresh permutation parser consisting of parser p. The the final result of the permutation parser is the function f applied to the return value of p. The parser p is not allowed to accept empty input - use the optional combinator (<$?>) instead. If the function f takes more than one parameter, the type variable b is instantiated to a functional type which combines nicely with the adds parser p to the (<||>) combinator. This results in stylized code where a permutation parser starts with a combining function f followed by the parsers. The function f gets its parameters in the order in which the parsers are specified, but actual input can be in any order.

  5. (<$?>) :: Stream s Identity tok => (a -> b) -> (a, Parsec s st a) -> StreamPermParser s st b

    parsec Text.Parsec.Perm

    The expression f <$?> (x,p) creates a fresh permutation parser consisting of parser p. The the final result of the permutation parser is the function f applied to the return value of p. The parser p is optional - if it can not be applied, the default value x will be used instead.

  6. (<$$>) :: Stream s Identity tok => (a -> b) -> Parsec s st a -> StreamPermParser s st b

    parsec Text.ParserCombinators.Parsec.Perm

    The expression f <$$> p creates a fresh permutation parser consisting of parser p. The the final result of the permutation parser is the function f applied to the return value of p. The parser p is not allowed to accept empty input - use the optional combinator (<$?>) instead. If the function f takes more than one parameter, the type variable b is instantiated to a functional type which combines nicely with the adds parser p to the (<||>) combinator. This results in stylized code where a permutation parser starts with a combining function f followed by the parsers. The function f gets its parameters in the order in which the parsers are specified, but actual input can be in any order.

  7. (<$?>) :: Stream s Identity tok => (a -> b) -> (a, Parsec s st a) -> StreamPermParser s st b

    parsec Text.ParserCombinators.Parsec.Perm

    The expression f <$?> (x,p) creates a fresh permutation parser consisting of parser p. The the final result of the permutation parser is the function f applied to the return value of p. The parser p is optional - if it can not be applied, the default value x will be used instead.

  8. (.$.) :: Doc -> Doc -> Doc

    optparse-applicative Options.Applicative.Help.Pretty

    No documentation available.

  9. (=$) :: forall (m :: Type -> Type) a b c r . Monad m => Conduit a m b -> ConduitT b c m r -> ConduitT a c m r

    conduit Data.Conduit

    Deprecated: Use .|

  10. (=$$+) :: forall (m :: Type -> Type) a b r . Monad m => ConduitT a b m () -> ConduitT b Void m r -> ConduitT a Void m (SealedConduitT a b m (), r)

    conduit Data.Conduit

    The connect-and-resume operator. This does not close the Conduit, but instead returns it to be used again. This allows a Conduit to be used incrementally in a large program, without forcing the entire program to live in the Sink monad. Leftover data returned from the Sink will be discarded. Mnemonic: connect + do more. Since 1.0.17

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