Copyright | (C) 2013-2016 Edward Kmett 2015-2016 Artyom |
---|---|
License | BSD-style (see the file LICENSE) |
Safe Haskell | Safe |
Language | Haskell2010 |
This module provides just the types (Lens
, Traversal
, etc). It's needed to break the dependency cycle – Lens.Micro depends on Lens.Micro.Internal, but Lens.Micro.Internal needs types like Lens
, so Lens
can't be defined in Lens.Micro.
Synopsis
- type ASetter s t a b = (a -> Identity b) -> s -> Identity t
- type ASetter' s a = ASetter s s a a
- type SimpleGetter s a = forall r. Getting r s a
- type Getting r s a = (a -> Const r a) -> s -> Const r s
- type SimpleFold s a = forall r. Monoid r => Getting r s a
- type Lens s t a b = forall f. Functor f => (a -> f b) -> s -> f t
- type Lens' s a = Lens s s a a
- type Traversal s t a b = forall f. Applicative f => (a -> f b) -> s -> f t
- type Traversal' s a = Traversal s s a a
- type LensLike f s t a b = (a -> f b) -> s -> f t
- type LensLike' f s a = LensLike f s s a a
Documentation
type ASetter s t a b = (a -> Identity b) -> s -> Identity t Source #
ASetter s t a b
is something that turns a function modifying a value into a function modifying a structure. If you ignore Identity
(as Identity a
is the same thing as a
), the type is:
type ASetter s t a b = (a -> b) -> s -> t
The reason Identity
is used here is for ASetter
to be composable with other types, such as Lens
.
Technically, if you're writing a library, you shouldn't use this type for setters you are exporting from your library; the right type to use is Setter
, but it is not provided by this package (because then it'd have to depend on distributive). It's completely alright, however, to export functions which take an ASetter
as an argument.
type SimpleGetter s a = forall r. Getting r s a Source #
A SimpleGetter s a
extracts a
from s
; so, it's the same thing as (s -> a)
, but you can use it in lens chains because its type looks like this:
type SimpleGetter s a = forall r. (a -> Const r a) -> s -> Const r s
Since Const r
is a functor, SimpleGetter
has the same shape as other lens types and can be composed with them. To get (s -> a)
out of a SimpleGetter
, choose r ~ a
and feed Const :: a -> Const a a
to the getter:
-- the actual signature is more permissive: --view
::Getting
a s a -> s -> aview
::SimpleGetter
s a -> s -> aview
getter =getConst
. getterConst
The actual Getter
from lens is more general:
type Getter s a = forall f. (Contravariant f, Functor f) => (a -> f a) -> s -> f s
I'm not currently aware of any functions that take lens's Getter
but won't accept SimpleGetter
, but you should try to avoid exporting SimpleGetter
s anyway to minimise confusion. Alternatively, look at microlens-contra, which provides a fully lens-compatible Getter
.
Lens users: you can convert a SimpleGetter
to Getter
by applying to . view
to it.
type Getting r s a = (a -> Const r a) -> s -> Const r s Source #
Functions that operate on getters and folds – such as (^.
), (^..
), (^?
) – use Getter r s a
(with different values of r
) to describe what kind of result they need. For instance, (^.
) needs the getter to be able to return a single value, and so it accepts a getter of type Getting a s a
. (^..
) wants the getter to gather values together, so it uses Getting (Endo [a]) s a
(it could've used Getting [a] s a
instead, but it's faster with Endo
). The choice of r
depends on what you want to do with elements you're extracting from s
.
type SimpleFold s a = forall r. Monoid r => Getting r s a Source #
A SimpleFold s a
extracts several a
s from s
; so, it's pretty much the same thing as (s -> [a])
, but you can use it with lens operators.
The actual Fold
from lens is more general:
type Fold s a = forall f. (Contravariant f, Applicative f) => (a -> f a) -> s -> f s
There are several functions in lens that accept lens's Fold
but won't accept SimpleFold
; I'm aware of
takingWhile
,
droppingWhile
,
backwards
,
foldByOf
,
foldMapByOf
.
For this reason, try not to export SimpleFold
s if at all possible. microlens-contra provides a fully lens-compatible Fold
.
Lens users: you can convert a SimpleFold
to Fold
by applying folded . toListOf
to it.
type Lens s t a b = forall f. Functor f => (a -> f b) -> s -> f t Source #
Lens s t a b
is the lowest common denominator of a setter and a getter, something that has the power of both; it has a Functor
constraint, and since both Const
and Identity
are functors, it can be used whenever a getter or a setter is needed.
a
is the type of the value inside of structureb
is the type of the replaced values
is the type of the whole structuret
is the type of the structure after replacinga
in it withb
type Lens' s a = Lens s s a a Source #
This is a type alias for monomorphic lenses which don't change the type of the container (or of the value inside).
type Traversal s t a b = forall f. Applicative f => (a -> f b) -> s -> f t Source #
Traversal s t a b
is a generalisation of Lens
which allows many targets (possibly 0). It's achieved by changing the constraint to Applicative
instead of Functor
– indeed, the point of Applicative
is that you can combine effects, which is just what we need to have many targets.
Ultimately, traversals should follow 2 laws:
t pure ≡ pure fmap (t f) . t g ≡ getCompose . t (Compose . fmap f . g)
The 1st law states that you can't change the shape of the structure or do anything funny with elements (traverse elements which aren't in the structure, create new elements out of thin air, etc.). The 2nd law states that you should be able to fuse 2 identical traversals into one. For a more detailed explanation of the laws, see this blog post (if you prefer rambling blog posts), or The Essence Of The Iterator Pattern (if you prefer papers).
Traversing any value twice is a violation of traversal laws. You can, however, traverse values in any order.
type Traversal' s a = Traversal s s a a Source #
This is a type alias for monomorphic traversals which don't change the type of the container (or of the values inside).
type LensLike f s t a b = (a -> f b) -> s -> f t Source #
LensLike
is a type that is often used to make combinators as general as possible. For instance, take (<<%~
), which only requires the passed lens to be able to work with the (,) a
functor (lenses and traversals can do that). The fully expanded type is as follows:
(<<%~
) :: ((a -> (a, b)) -> s -> (a, t)) -> (a -> b) -> s -> (a, t)
With LensLike
, the intent to use the (,) a
functor can be made a bit clearer:
(<<%~
) :: LensLike ((,) a) s t a b -> (a -> b) -> s -> (a, t)