Selections

See it on Hackage
See also this library’s Scala port by Christopher Davenport
You’ll probably want to start by reading the
tutorial.
selections is a haskell package for transforming subsets of values within a functor using
an intuitive selection-based interface.
Ever wished you could select just a few values within a functor, perform some
operations on them, then flatten them back into the plain old functor again? Now
you can!
Selection is a newtype wrapper around Functors which adds several
combinators and interesting instances. Wrapping a functor in Selection allows
you to:
- Select specific values within your functor according to a predicate
- Expand/Contract selections based on additional predicates using
include
and exclude
- Select values based on their context if your functor is also a Comonad
- Map over unselected and/or selected values using
Bifunctor
- Traverse over unselected and/or selected values using
Bitraversable
- Fold over unselected and/or selected values using
Bifoldable
- Perform monad computations over selected values if your functor is a Monad
- Extract all unselected or selected elements to a list
- Deselect and return to your original functor using
unify
- Traverse or fold over selections using
Control.Lens
Here’s how it looks, tutorials are available
here.
xs = [1..6]
λ> newSelection xs -- wrap `[Int]` into `Selection [] Int Int`, you can wrap any functor
& select even -- Focus on only even integers
& mapSelected (+100) -- Increment selected ints by 100
& bimap (("Odd: " ++) . show) (("Even: " ++) . show) -- map over unselected and selected values respectively
& forgetSelection -- Collapse back down to the underlying functor, in this case a list
["Odd: 1","Even: 102","Odd: 3","Even: 104","Odd: 5","Even: 106"]
Technically you could use Selection as a monad-transformer, but it’s a bit
clunky and you’d probably be better off with
EitherT.
Fun fact, Selection is isomorphic to EitherT, but the semantics are quite
different and they’re suited to different purposes.
When Should/Shouldn’t I Use Selections?
You can use selections whenever you’ve got a bunch of things and you want to operate over just a few of them at a time.
You can do everything that selections provides by combining a bunch of predicates with fmap, but it gets messy really
quick; selections provides a clean interface for this sort of operation.
You shouldn’t use selections when you’re looking for a monadic interface for this sort of thing, selections works
at the value level and typically you want to chain selection commands using (.) or (&), it technically can
be used as a monad transformer if your underlying functor is also a monad, but at that point you may wish to check
out EitherT instead.
Examples
Check out the Accounts
tutorial
first to get your bearings. After that continue to the Lenses
tutorial.