
On 05/20/2013 10:41 PM, Carter Schonwald wrote:
could you elaborate on the other useful generalizations please? :-)
For example, mapM defines a functor in the Kleisli category: mapM return = return mapM (f >=> g) = mapM f >=> mapM g So then why not have a generalized Functor class that works on arbitrary categories: class CFunctor c f where cmap :: c a b -> c (f a) (f b) instance (Traversable t) => CFunctor Kleisli t where ... Or consider that `mapM` leaks space for large traversables. Another alternative generalization that doesn't leak space is to use pipes. This is not as far-fetched as it sounds, considering that `pipes` are `ListT` done right when viewed through the `RespondT` newtype: -- i.e. the same as `ProduceT` in `pipes` type ListT = RespondT ProxyCorrect C () () -- Just pretend we lived in a parallel Haskell world with this definition type [] = ListT Identity Then `mapM` becomes `(RespondT . lift .)` when viewed through the lens of the `pipes`-based `ListT m` (except with no more space leaks). Then you'd have the theoretically pure version that does not leak space, but as much as I like `pipes` not a single beginner would ever think to use that. APIs are like monad tutorials: it's better to teach people starting from something simple and concrete than something abstract. If the Prelude is not for teaching purposes, then what is?
On Tue, May 21, 2013 at 1:41 AM, Gabriel Gonzalez
mailto:gabriel439@gmail.com> wrote: I want to apologize to wren (and everybody else). I was tired and overreacted when the discussion started veering into making more breaking changes.
I don't mind the Foldable changes too much. My main concerns are:
* loss of monomorphism makes teaching more difficult * They can be generalized in other useful ways
However, I don't consider those concerns show-stoppers.
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