
I did some work on this sort of thing for primitive, which didn't want it.
But maybe array does. If I don't link to it in the next day, please ping me.
On Thu, Aug 22, 2019, 1:25 AM Zemyla
The "runSTArray" and "runSTUArray" functions allow efficiently working with Arrays in the ST monad before turning them immutable; however, they don't allow any way to return supplemental or alternative information with the array. There are many times when I've wanted to get an (Array i e, w) or a Maybe (UArray i e), but I couldn't, and had to use the far-more-inefficient freezeArray and hope it inlined properly.
What I want are functions that generalize the return types given:
runSTArrayTrav :: Traversable t => (forall s. ST s (t (STArray s i e))) -> t (Array i e) runSTArrayTrav m = runST $ m >>= traverse unsafeFreezeSTArray
runSTUArrayTrav :: Traversable t => (forall s. ST s (t (STUArray s i e))) -> t (UArray i e) runSTUArrayTrav m = runST $ m >>= traverse unsafeFreezeSTUArray
And then an even more generalized version, which takes a sort of Lens-like iterator, and allows returning multiple arrays of different kinds, types, and indices:
runSTArrayWith :: (forall f s. Applicative f => (forall i e. STArray s i e -> f (Array i e)) -> (forall i e. STUArray s i e -> f (UArray i e)) -> u s -> f v) -> (forall s. ST s (u s)) -> v runSTArrayWith tr m = runST $ m >>= tr unsafeFreezeSTArray unsafeFreezeSTUArray
The advantage of the runSTArrayTrav/runSTUArrayTrav functions, if they're subsets of the runSTArrayWith function, is that it works with standard things like (,) and Either, and doesn't require wrapping it in a newtype so that the s is at the end.
The names of the functions are up for debate, and I know there will be one, because naming things is one of the two hard problems in computer science, along with cache invalidation and off-by-one errors. _______________________________________________ Libraries mailing list Libraries@haskell.org http://mail.haskell.org/cgi-bin/mailman/listinfo/libraries