
Roman Cheplyaka
Right now Data.Typeable is proxy-agnostic. The proposal is just to export a Proxy type for convenience (alternatively, the user can define her own Proxy or use one from tagged). What exactly forces you to support both proxies in your code?
(I'm reluctant to have many proxy types scattered around mainly because of unnecessary name conflicts, but I'd like to understand your concerns too.)
It seems the options before us are, a) Use Proxy strictly internally in Data.Typeable. In this case users will continue to use the Proxy types in tagged and elsewhere as they already happily do b) Export Proxy from Data.Typeable in its current state, accepting that users relying on external Proxy types will need to either accept a loss of functionality, explicitly hide Typeable's Proxy, or rely on orphan instances c) Find a way to bring Typeable's Proxy type to a level of functionality comparable to that currently available outside of base Having tried to compile a good amount of code using Data.Typeable's Proxy, it seems clear to me that (b) is the worst of the three outcomes. There are a good number of packages which rely on the instances provided by external Proxy types. Removing these will bring great deal of pain in the short turn and pose a large maintenance burden moving forward. Tonight I tried to implement (c) but found that this might be quite tricky without establishing some very brittle cyclic imports in base. As it stands, nearly everything in base imports Typeable somehow. Requiring Typeable to in turn import Applicative, Foldable, Traversable, and others places some very unfortunate cycles in the dependency structure. Even after an hour of hacking and 200 lines of changes, I still hadn't succeeded in getting base to build with a reasonable set of Proxy instances (although, admittedly, this might just be due to my inexperience with this sort of issue). In light of these points, I believe that (a) is the course of least pain. Those users that need Proxy already happily rely on packages outside of base. Meanwhile base can use its own (necessarily minimal) Proxy internally without issue. This approach requires minimal changes in base and avoids unnecessary breakage of user code, all while depriving no one of current or future functionality. Admittedly, there may be a couple more Proxy types in the namespace than would otherwise exist, but this seems like a small price to pay to avoid the breakage and pain of (b) and (c) above. Cheers, - Ben