This library implements the ideas of
Data types a la carte
as outlined in the paper
Compositional data types. The
purpose of this library is to allow the programmer to construct data
types -- as well as the functions defined on them -- in a modular
fashion. The underlying idea is to separate the signature of a data
type from the fixed point construction that produces its recursive
structure. Signatures can then be composed and decomposed freely.
Building on that foundation, this library provides additional
extensions and (run-time) optimisations which make compositional data types
usable for practical implementations. In particular, it
provides an excellent framework for manipulating and analysing
abstract syntax trees in a type-safe manner. Thus, it is perfectly
suited for programming language implementations, especially, in an environment
consisting of a family of tightly interwoven domain-specific languages.
In concrete terms, this library provides the following features:
Compositional data types in the style of Wouter Swierstra's
Functional Pearl Data types a la carte. The implementation of
signature subsumption is based on the paper
Composing and Decomposing Data Types (Workshop on Generic
Programming, 2014, to appear), which makes signature composition more
flexible.
Modular definition of functions on compositional data types through
catamorphisms and anamorphisms as well as more structured
recursion schemes such as primitive recursion and co-recursion,
and course-of-value iteration and co-iteration.
Support for monadic computations via monadic variants of all
recursion schemes.
Support of a succinct programming style over compositional data types
via generic programming combinators that allow various forms of
generic transformations and generic queries.
Generalisation of compositional data types (terms) to
compositional data types "with holes" (contexts). This allows
flexible reuse of a wide variety of catamorphisms (called
term homomorphisms) as well as an efficient composition of them.
Operations on signatures, for example, to add and remove
annotations of abstract syntax trees. This includes combinators to
propagate annotations fully automatically through certain
term homomorphisms.
Optimisation of the implementation of recursion schemes. This
includes short-cut fusion style optimisation rules which yield a
performance boost of up to factor six.
Automatic derivation of instances of all relevant type classes for
using compositional data types via Template Haskell. This includes
instances of Prelude.Eq
, Prelude.Ord
and Prelude.Show
that are
derived via instances for functorial variants of them. Additionally,
also smart constructors, which allow to easily construct inhabitants
of compositional data types, are automatically generated.
Mutually recursive data types and
generalised algebraic data types (GADTs). All of the above is also lifted
to families of mutually recursive data types and (more generally) GADTs.
This extension resides in the module Data.Comp.Multi
.
Examples of using (generalised) compositional data types are bundled
with the package in the folder examples
.
There are some supplementary packages, some of which were included
in previous versions of this package:
compdata-param:
a parametric variant of compositional data types to deal with variable
binders in a systematic way.
compdata-automata:
advanced recursion schemes derived from tree automata that allow for a
higher degree of modularity and make it possible to apply fusion.
compdata-dags:
recursion schemes on directed acyclic graphs.