Looks to me like it would be a breaking change even when the extension is not enabled, because the grammar is not conditional on extensions. The usual trick of using keywords to enable extensions (because keywords can be conditionally enabled in the lexer) doesn't work in this case.

Breaking changes gated by a language extension are OK, right?  According to our still-draft (GR1).  As Moritz says

I have absolutely no issue with new extensions rejecting code that compiles fine without them. My only objections is to GHC not accepting code it accepted before without a deprecation period in between.
 
Simon M: are you arguing against, or just pointing out?

Simon

On Tue, 12 Sept 2023 at 08:27, Simon Marlow <marlowsd@gmail.com> wrote:
Looks to me like it would be a breaking change even when the extension is not enabled, because the grammar is not conditional on extensions. The usual trick of using keywords to enable extensions (because keywords can be conditionally enabled in the lexer) doesn't work in this case.

Cheers
Simon

On Sun, 10 Sept 2023 at 05:17, Moritz Angermann <moritz.angermann@gmail.com> wrote:
Joachim,

My understand if the cost and drawbacks section[1], is that existing code breaks even without explicitly enabling the extension. If this is indeed not the case it should be called our explicitly in the section that breakage requires the extension to be enabled. Also an explanation why the patsyn test cases fail. Do we automatically enable that extension in the testsuite? Where does the regression come from?

Maybe I’m misreading that section and it just needs to be clarified that there is _no breakage without **explixitly** enabling the extension_ to existing code. 

Cheers,
 Moritz

[1]: 

On Sun, 10 Sep 2023 at 12:04 PM, Joachim Breitner <mail@joachim-breitner.de> wrote:
Hi,

since this is guarded by an extension that doesn't even exist yet, no code is broken, is there?

I also don't expect this to be enabled in the future without coinciding with an intentional action by the developers - enabling this extension or switching to a future language edition that has this enabled by default (should that ever exist). Is it not sufficient if they are _then_ bothered with this change?

(That said, we could say that a unparenthized type annotation on a pattern synonym is simply confusing, and thus use a warning to nudge the developers to add the parentheses now.)

So not opposed to an early warning, I just don't think it's strictly necessary for this change.

Cheers,
Joachim

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