Safe Haskell | None |
---|---|
Language | Haskell2010 |
Synopsis
- type UnaryType = Type
- type NvUnaryType = Type
- isNvUnaryType :: Type -> Bool
- unwrapType :: Type -> Type
- isVoidTy :: Type -> Bool
- typePrimRep :: HasDebugCallStack => Type -> [PrimRep]
- typePrimRep1 :: HasDebugCallStack => UnaryType -> PrimRep
- runtimeRepPrimRep :: HasDebugCallStack => SDoc -> Type -> [PrimRep]
- typePrimRepArgs :: Type -> [PrimRep]
- data PrimRep
- primRepToType :: PrimRep -> Type
- countFunRepArgs :: Arity -> Type -> RepArity
- countConRepArgs :: DataCon -> RepArity
- tyConPrimRep :: HasDebugCallStack => TyCon -> [PrimRep]
- tyConPrimRep1 :: HasDebugCallStack => TyCon -> PrimRep
- ubxSumRepType :: [[PrimRep]] -> [SlotTy]
- layoutUbxSum :: SortedSlotTys -> [SlotTy] -> [Int]
- typeSlotTy :: UnaryType -> Maybe SlotTy
- data SlotTy
- slotPrimRep :: SlotTy -> PrimRep
- primRepSlot :: PrimRep -> SlotTy
Code generator views onto Types
type NvUnaryType = Type Source #
isNvUnaryType :: Type -> Bool Source #
unwrapType :: Type -> Type Source #
Gets rid of the stuff that prevents us from understanding the runtime representation of a type. Including: 1. Casts 2. Newtypes 3. Foralls 4. Synonyms But not type/data families, because we don't have the envs to hand.
Predicates on types
Type representation for the code generator
typePrimRep :: HasDebugCallStack => Type -> [PrimRep] Source #
typePrimRep1 :: HasDebugCallStack => UnaryType -> PrimRep Source #
Like typePrimRep
, but assumes that there is precisely one PrimRep
output;
an empty list of PrimReps becomes a VoidRep
runtimeRepPrimRep :: HasDebugCallStack => SDoc -> Type -> [PrimRep] Source #
Take a type of kind RuntimeRep and extract the list of PrimRep
that
it encodes.
typePrimRepArgs :: Type -> [PrimRep] Source #
A PrimRep
is an abstraction of a type. It contains information that
the code generator needs in order to pass arguments, return results,
and store values of this type.
VoidRep | |
LiftedRep | |
UnliftedRep | Unlifted pointer |
Int8Rep | Signed, 8-bit value |
Int16Rep | Signed, 16-bit value |
IntRep | Signed, word-sized value |
WordRep | Unsigned, word-sized value |
Int64Rep | Signed, 64 bit value (with 32-bit words only) |
Word8Rep | Unsigned, 8 bit value |
Word16Rep | Unsigned, 16 bit value |
Word64Rep | Unsigned, 64 bit value (with 32-bit words only) |
AddrRep | A pointer, but not to a Haskell value (use '(Un)liftedRep') |
FloatRep | |
DoubleRep | |
VecRep Int PrimElemRep | A vector |
primRepToType :: PrimRep -> Type Source #
Convert a PrimRep back to a Type. Used only in the unariser to give types to fresh Ids. Really, only the type's representation matters.
countConRepArgs :: DataCon -> RepArity Source #
tyConPrimRep :: HasDebugCallStack => TyCon -> [PrimRep] Source #
Find the runtime representation of a TyCon
. Defined here to
avoid module loops. Returns a list of the register shapes necessary.
tyConPrimRep1 :: HasDebugCallStack => TyCon -> PrimRep Source #
Like tyConPrimRep
, but assumed that there is precisely zero or
one PrimRep
output
Unboxed sum representation type
ubxSumRepType :: [[PrimRep]] -> [SlotTy] Source #
Given the arguments of a sum type constructor application, return the unboxed sum rep type.
E.g.
We call `ubxSumRepType [ [IntRep], [LiftedRep], [IntRep, FloatRep] ]`, which returns [WordSlot, PtrSlot, WordSlot, FloatSlot]
INVARIANT: Result slots are sorted (via Ord SlotTy), except that at the head of the list we have the slot for the tag.
layoutUbxSum :: SortedSlotTys -> [SlotTy] -> [Int] Source #
slotPrimRep :: SlotTy -> PrimRep Source #
primRepSlot :: PrimRep -> SlotTy Source #