
So in the mean time , if I want write a data type that's polymorphic over
types that are heap pointer represented, I'll need to use a kind type class
to bound my polymorphism? I'm interested in trying To understand if this
lets me quantify over ptry structures safely.
@ed, does any of this have an impact or relevance to your structs lib
experiment you were sharing at Icfp?
On Tuesday, April 5, 2016, Richard Eisenberg
Yes, that's correct. The RuntimeRep story generally allows for such polymorphism in the future, but it's not implemented yet. One concern is that doing this would require RuntimeRep to look like
data Levity = Lifted | Unlifted data RuntimeRep = PtrRep Levity | IntRep | VoidRep | ...
The problem here is that, in the vastly common case of kind *, this requires an extra indirection. I actually implemented this, and indeed the performance of GHC decreased. Given that we have no way, yet, to take advantage of the kind of polymorphism you seek, I flattened the structure of RuntimeRep in order to get a modest but consistent performance boost.
So I'm, personally, very open to this direction of travel, but we have to work out both how the polymorphism should work and how to implement this without degrading performance.
Richard
On Apr 5, 2016, at 2:54 AM, Carter Schonwald
javascript:_e(%7B%7D,'cvml','carter.schonwald@gmail.com');> wrote: i was reading https://ghc.haskell.org/trac/ghc/wiki/NoSubKinds and looking at some of the applicable code, and it looks like i can't quantify over ptr-y heap values that may or may not be lifted, at least with the current state of play, is this correct? _______________________________________________ ghc-devs mailing list ghc-devs@haskell.org javascript:_e(%7B%7D,'cvml','ghc-devs@haskell.org'); http://mail.haskell.org/cgi-bin/mailman/listinfo/ghc-devs