
Most academic papers do use the eval example, but it is a practical example. This use of GADTs is nice for embedded languages. For example, Accelerate uses a supercharged version of it to catch as many errors as possible during Haskell host program compile-time (as opposed to Accelerate compile time, which is Haskell runtime).
Manuel
Simon Peyton-Jones
Friends
I’m giving a series of five lectures at the Laser Summer School (2-8 Sept), on “Adventures with types in Haskell”. My plan is: 1. Type classes 2. Type families [examples including Repa type tags] 3. GADTs 4. Kind polymorphism 5. System FC and deferred type errors
This message is to invite you to send me your favourite example of using a GADT to get the job done. Ideally I’d like to use examples that are (a) realistic, drawn from practice (b) compelling and (c) easy to present without a lot of background. Most academic papers only have rather limited examples, usually eval :: Term t -> t, but I know that GADTs are widely used in practice.
Any ideas from your experience, satisfying (a-c)? If so, and you can spare the time, do send me a short write-up. Copy the list, so that we can all benefit.
Many thanks
Simon _______________________________________________ Glasgow-haskell-users mailing list Glasgow-haskell-users@haskell.org http://www.haskell.org/mailman/listinfo/glasgow-haskell-users