That sounds like a bug/oversight!  Is that not fixed in 9.2?

On Mon, Apr 5, 2021 at 11:08 PM David Feuer <david.feuer@gmail.com> wrote:
`Char` is defined in user code. What you really can't define are Char# and TYPE, and you can't modify `RuntimeRep`. Speaking of `Char#`, I see that in 9.0, at least, it has kind TYPE 'WordRep. Why is that not Word32Rep?

On Mon, Apr 5, 2021, 10:50 PM Richard Eisenberg <rae@richarde.dev> wrote:


On Apr 1, 2021, at 8:12 PM, Anthony Clayden <anthony_clayden@clear.net.nz> wrote:

Can I user-define a conventional type-class that behaves more like `(~)`?

I don't think so.

But why does this matter? I can't define `Char` in user code, but it's exported from the Prelude and requires no extensions. While I can define Eq in user code, I can't make `deriving` work with my version. I can't define `error` in user code. There are many others, I'm sure.

So: why does this matter?

Thanks,
Richard
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