Oops, forgot to include the list.

---------- Forwarded message ----------
From: Tikhon Jelvis <tikhon@jelv.is>
Date: Fri, May 16, 2014 at 12:27 PM
Subject: Re: [Haskell-cafe] Composable events: Applicative and Alternative
To: Corentin Dupont <corentin.dupont@gmail.com>


It sounds like you're trying to solve the same problems as FRP. In fact, this was basically the original impetus for FRP: making events (and reactive programs in general) nicely composable.

Perhaps you could take a look at how event streams work in frameworks like Reactive-Banana? Reactive-Banana doesn't make its events applicatives, but it's a perfectly reasonable thing to do: there's a great explanation in Conal's "Push-Pull Functional Reactive Programming"[1] in section 2.2.4.


On Fri, May 16, 2014 at 12:15 PM, Corentin Dupont <corentin.dupont@gmail.com> wrote:

I created a DSL to manage and create events (see under). It's an instance of Applicative and Alternative, which make them compose nicely.
The idea is that when an event is firing, I look the corresponding event in the tree and replace it by its value using Pure.

For example onInputText will trigger the display of a form with a text field on the screen, and when the player validates the form, the same
onInputText is searched in the tree by the engine and replaced by the text value. This is where the difficulty begins:

--> How to make Event an instance of Eq? How to search and replace through it?

The problem is the EventProduct primitive, that forbids to make the DSL an instance of Eq:
EventProduct :: Event (a -> b) -> Event a -> Event b

Should I replace it by:
EventProduct :: Event a -> Event b -> Event (a,b)

But then, bye-bye Applicative/Alternative instances!
How can I make the tree of events searchable/traversable and still maintain the Applicative instance?

Thanks!!
Corentin


On Sat, May 3, 2014 at 8:02 PM, Corentin Dupont <corentin.dupont@gmail.com> wrote:
Hi Cafe!!

For my game Nomyx, I am using events that the player can program. For example, the player can register a callback that will be triggered when a new player arrives. He can also program some forms (with buttons, checkboxes, textboxes...) to appear on the Web GUI. The problem is those events are not composable: he has to create and handle them one by one.

So I'm thinking of making those events composable by making them an instance of Applicative and Alternative.
For Applicative, this makes events composable very much like in Applicative-Functors and Reform. I can build neat composed events such as (full program below):

onInputMyRecord :: Event MyRecord
onInputMyRecord = MyRecord <$> onInputText <*> onInputCheckbox

For Alternative, I haven't seen any example
of it on the net. The idea is that the first event that fires is used to build the alternative:

onInputMyAlternative :: Event Bool
onInputMyAlternative = (True <$ onInputButton) <|> (False <$ onInputButton)

Here is an example program:

{-# LANGUAGE GADTs #-}

module ComposableEvents where

import Control.Applicative
import Data.Time
import Data.Traversable

type PlayerNumber = Int

data Event a where
   OnInputText :: PlayerNumber -> Event String  
        -- A textbox will be created for the player. When filled, this event will fire and return the result
   OnInputCheckbox :: PlayerNumber -> Event Bool
        -- Idem with a checkbox
   OnInputButton :: PlayerNumber -> Event ()    
        -- Idem with a button
   OnTime :: UTCTime -> Event ()                
        -- time event
   EventSum :: Event a -> Event a -> Event a             -- The first event to fire will be returned
   EventProduct :: Event (a -> b) -> Event a -> Event b  -- both events should fire, and then the result is returned
   Fmap :: (a -> b) -> Event a -> Event b 
              -- transforms the value returned by an event.
   Pure :: a -> Event a                                  -- Create a fake event. The result is useable with no delay.
   Empty :: Event a                                      -- An event that is never fired.

instance Functor Event where
   fmap = Fmap

instance Applicative Event where
   pure = Pure
   (<*>) = EventProduct

instance Alternative Event where
   (<|>) = EventSum
   empty = Empty

onInputText = OnInputText
onInputCheckbox = OnInputCheckbox
onInputButton = OnInputButton
onTime = OnTime

-- A product type
data MyRecord = MyRecord String Bool

-- A sum type
data MyAlternative = A | B

-- Using the Applicative instance, we can build a product type from two separate event results.
-- The event callback should be called only when all two events have fired.
onInputMyRecord :: Event MyRecord
onInputMyRecord = MyRecord <$> onInputText 1 <*> onInputCheckbox 1

-- other possible implementation (given a monad instance)
-- onInputMyRecord' = do
--    s <- onInputText
--    b <- onInputCheckbox
--    return $ MyRecord s b

-- Using the Alternative instance, we build a sum type.
-- The event callback should be called when the first event have fired.
onInputMyAlternative :: Event MyAlternative
onInputMyAlternative = (const A <$> onInputButton 1) <|> (const B <$> onInputButton 1)

allPlayers = [1 .. 10]

-- Now complex events can be created, such as voting systems:
voteEvent :: UTCTime -> Event ([Maybe Bool])
voteEvent time = sequenceA $ map (singleVote time) allPlayers

singleVote :: UTCTime -> PlayerNumber -> Event (Maybe Bool)
singleVote timeLimit pn = (Just <$> onInputCheckbox pn) <|> (const Nothing <$> onTime timeLimit)

vote :: UTCTime -> Event Bool
vote timeLimit = unanimity <$> (voteEvent timeLimit)

unanimity :: [Maybe Bool] -> Bool
unanimity = all (== Just True)


--Evaluation
--evalEvent :: Event a -> State Game a
--evalEvent = undefined

With this DSL, I can create complex events such as time limited votes very neatly...
There is much left to do for a full implem: the way to register callbacks on complex events, the evaluator and the event manager.
Have you heard about a similar implementation? It seems pretty useful. Maybe in FRP frameworks?

Thanks a lot!!
Corentin
PS: I copied this example also in https://github.com/cdupont/Nomyx-design/blob/master/ComposableEvents.hs.


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