
Thanks Andy, et al. I can stop hacking for now then. I'm using a simple fromList function already which seems like a reasonable, and at least semi-standard solution (http://www.haskell.org/hoogle/?hoogle=fromList)
Paul
-----Original Message-----
From: sploink88@gmail.com on behalf of andy morris
Sent: Sat 02/05/2009 00:13
To: Paul Keir
Cc: haskell-cafe@haskell.org
Subject: Re: [Haskell-cafe] fromInteger for Lists[MESSAGE NOT SCANNED]
2009/5/1 Paul Keir
There's nothing better than making a data type an instance of Num. In particular, fromInteger is a joy. But how about lists?
For example, if I have
data Foo a = F [a]
I can create a fromInteger such as fromInteger i = F [fromInteger i]
and then a 19::(Foo Int), could become F [19].
Is it possible to do something similar for lists? So could [1,2,3]::(Foo Int) become something slightly different, say,
F [1,2,3]
Paul
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If you mean what I think you're referring to, you can't. The only reason it works for integer literals is that the compiler replaces occurrences of, say, 19 with (fromInteger 19). There's no function that's automatically applied to list literals, so ([1,2,3] :: Foo Int) isn't able to do anything useful, unfortunately. However, there's an extension in GHC, OverloadedStrings, which lets you use the method fromString of class Data.String.IsString to overload literals. (That's not what you asked, though, I know. :) )