At first sight I'd say it's the way lazy text works with reverse that the interpreter doesn't like...On Tue, May 26, 2015 at 7:47 PM, Mike Meyer <mwm@mired.org> wrote:No answer on -beginners, so I'm trying -cafe.I'm trying to run interpreted code via ClassyPrelude, and getting some results that make me suspect a bug in the Prelude's type system. Or maybe the interpreter.Anyway, here's a bit of code that works as expected:{-# LANGUAGE NoImplicitPrelude #-}import ClassyPreludeimport Language.Haskell.Interpretermain :: IO ()main = dofun <- runInterpreter $ makeFun "reverse"case fun ofLeft e -> print eRight f -> readFile "/etc/motd" >>= hPut stdout . fmakeFun expr = doset [languageExtensions := [NoImplicitPrelude]]setImportsQ [("ClassyPrelude", Nothing)]interpret expr (as :: Text -> Text)I don't think I can simplify this any further. It works as expected, and also works as expected, and prints out the contents of /etc/motd reversed.However, if you change the type signature in the last line from Text -> Text to LText -> Ltext (to get lazy text), you get no output. But if you change the function in the first line after main from "reverse" to "id", it works.So far, it might be an issue with lazy IO. However, change the type signature in the last line to LText -> Text. In this case, there is no output for either value of the expression. I expect an error in this case, as neither id nor reverse should be able to have the type LText -> Text!So, is there something I missed in either ClassyPrelude or the Interpreter? Or is this a subtle interaction, in which case can someone suggest a workaround? Or have I found a bug in one of the two?
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