
Well I just read this:
http://www.haskell.org/haskellwiki/Arrow_tutorial
Adrian.
On 5 June 2013 21:58, Brent Yorgey
What are the types of 'split' and 'unsplit'? It is hard to guess what you want just from their names.
-Brent
On Wed, Jun 05, 2013 at 01:02:40PM +0800, Adrian May wrote:
Thanks Ertugrul. In the meantime I noticed that split and unsplit are also missing. Is there a similar replacement for them?
Adrian. On 5 Jun 2013 12:57, "Ertugrul Söylemez"
wrote: Adrian May
wrote: I just banged up against this problem:
http://haskell.1045720.n5.nabble.com/The-case-of-the-missing-Arrow-function-...
Was liftA2 (not the applicative one) a bad idea, or is there another way to do it, or what?
That liftA2 (let me call it liftA2') likely has this type signature:
liftA2' :: (Arrow cat) => (b -> c -> d) -> cat a b -> cat a c -> cat a d
Does this sound familiar? You can write this function in terms of the arrow combinators:
liftA2' f c d = arr (uncurry f) . (c &&& d)
However, if your arrow is also a family of applicative functors (i.e. pretty much always),
instance Applicative (MyArrow a)
then it's probably a bad idea, because you really want to use the cleaner liftA2 instead:
liftA2 :: (Applicative f) => (a -> b -> c) -> f a -> f b -> f c
Greets, Ertugrul
-- Not to be or to be and (not to be or to be and (not to be or to be and (not to be or to be and ... that is the list monad.
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