I meant that 'pop' and 'push' should have been written with 'modify', 'get', and 'set' instead of the raw constructor, not as a drop-in replacement.
I can show you examples later if this isn't clear, unless I'm not understanding your code above.
On Nov 24, 2010 10:46 AM, "Adam Miezianko" <
adam@theorylounge.org> wrote:
> On Wed, 24 Nov 2010 06:17:47 -0800, Antoine Latter <
aslatter@gmail.com>  
> wrote:
> 
>> On Tue, Nov 23, 2010 at 6:58 PM, Adam Miezianko <
adam@theorylounge.org>  
>> wrote:
>>> I'm working through Learn You a Haskell for Great Good [1] and getting
>>> a compiler error while playing around with some of the code.  I have
>>> this:
>>>
>>> pop :: State Stack Int
>>>
>>> But when I try to load it into ghci I get the following errors:
>>>
>>>  /home/admi/.pe/state.hs:6:6: Not in scope: data constructor `State'
>>>
>>> Now, I'm not exactly sure how to read the documentation for
>>> Control.Monad.State [2] but it seems that newtype State s a = State
>>> {...} defines a constructor, or am I wrong on that point too?  So,
>>> what am I missing here?  In case it matters, I am using mtl-2.0.1.0
>>> and ghci 6.12.3.
>>>
>>> [1] 
http://learnyouahaskell.com/for-a-few-monads-more
>>> [2]  
>>> 
http://cvs.haskell.org/Hugs/pages/libraries/mtl/Control-Monad-State.html>>>
>>
>> It looks like your documentation doesn't match the library you're using.
>>
>> The documentation for mtl-2.x is here:  
>> 
http://hackage.haskell.org/package/mtl
> 
> Thanks!
> 
> My documentation didn't have any version identification, so discovering  
> that there was a breaking interface change is no surprise now.  Next time  
> hoogle doesn't return me what I want I'll first suspect it's been removed  
> before questioning the accuracy of the search results.
> 
> On a somewhat related note, I also found the link you provide, but I found  
> 
hackage.haskell.org to be intermittently timing out for me this last week.
> 
>> However you might be better served using the 'modify' function.
> 
> Looking at the type signature of modify, I'm unsure how to use it.  It  
> does not look like I can just drop it in as a replacement for State  
> (StateT, state).  Could someone provide an example?  The tutorials seem to  
> mostly use the State constructor that's now gone.
> 
> --
> Adam Miezianko