6.4.17. Linear types

LinearTypes
Since:9.0.1

Enable the linear arrow a %1 -> b and the multiplicity-polymorphic arrow a %m -> b.

This extension is currently considered experimental, expect bugs, warts, and bad error messages; everything down to the syntax is subject to change. See, in particular, Limitations below. We encourage you to experiment with this extension and report issues in the GHC bug tracker the GHC bug tracker, adding the tag LinearTypes.

A function f is linear if: when its result is consumed exactly once, then its argument is consumed exactly once. Intuitively, it means that in every branch of the definition of f, its argument x must be used exactly once. Which can be done by

  • Returning x unmodified
  • Passing x to a linear function
  • Pattern-matching on x and using each argument exactly once in the same fashion.
  • Calling it as a function and using the result exactly once in the same fashion.

With -XLinearTypes, you can write f :: a %1 -> b to mean that f is a linear function from a to b. If UnicodeSyntax is enabled, the %1 -> arrow can be written as .

To allow uniform handling of linear a %1 -> b and unrestricted a -> b functions, there is a new function type a %m -> b. Here, m is a type of new kind Multiplicity. We have:

data Multiplicity = One | Many  -- Defined in GHC.Types

type a %1 -> b = a %One  -> b
type a  -> b = a %Many -> b

(See Datatype promotion).

We say that a variable whose multiplicity constraint is Many is unrestricted.

The multiplicity-polymorphic arrow a %m -> b is available in a prefix version as GHC.Exts.FUN m a b, which can be applied partially. See, however Limitations.

Linear and multiplicity-polymorphic arrows are always declared, never inferred. That is, if you don’t give an appropriate type signature to a function, it will be inferred as being a regular function of type a -> b.

6.4.17.1. Data types

By default, all fields in algebraic data types are linear (even if -XLinearTypes is not turned on). Given

data T1 a = MkT1 a

the value MkT1 x can be constructed and deconstructed in a linear context:

construct :: a %1 -> T1 a
construct x = MkT1 x

deconstruct :: T1 a %1 -> a
deconstruct (MkT1 x) = x  -- must consume `x` exactly once

When used as a value, MkT1 is given a multiplicity-polymorphic type: MkT1 :: forall {m} a. a %m -> T1 a. This makes it possible to use MkT1 in higher order functions. The additional multiplicity argument m is marked as inferred (see Inferred vs. specified type variables), so that there is no conflict with visible type application. When displaying types, unless -XLinearTypes is enabled, multiplicity polymorphic functions are printed as regular functions (see Printing multiplicity-polymorphic types); therefore constructors appear to have regular function types.

mkList :: [a] -> [MkT1 a]
mkList xs = map MkT1 xs

Hence the linearity of type constructors is invisible when -XLinearTypes is off.

Whether a data constructor field is linear or not can be customized using the GADT syntax. Given

data T2 a b c where
    MkT2 :: a -> b %1 -> c %1 -> T2 a b  -- Note unrestricted arrow in the first argument

the value MkT2 x y z can be constructed only if x is unrestricted. On the other hand, a linear function which is matching on MkT2 x y z must consume y and z exactly once, but there is no restriction on x.

If LinearTypes is disabled, all fields are considered to be linear fields, including GADT fields defined with the -> arrow.

In a newtype declaration, the field must be linear. Attempting to write an unrestricted newtype constructor with GADT syntax results in an error.

6.4.17.2. Printing multiplicity-polymorphic types

If LinearTypes is disabled, multiplicity variables in types are defaulted to Many when printing, in the same manner as described in Printing levity-polymorphic types. In other words, without LinearTypes, multiplicity-polymorphic functions a %m -> b are printed as normal Haskell2010 functions a -> b. This allows existing libraries to be generalized to linear types in a backwards-compatible manner; the general types are visible only if the user has enabled LinearTypes. (Note that a library can declare a linear function in the contravariant position, i.e. take a linear function as an argument. In this case, linearity cannot be hidden; it is an essential part of the exposed interface.)

6.4.17.3. Limitations

Linear types are still considered experimental and come with several limitations. If you have read the full design in the proposal (see Design and further reading below), here is a run down of the missing pieces.

  • Multiplicity polymorphism is incomplete and experimental. You may have success using it, or you may not. Expect it to be really unreliable.

  • There is currently no support for multiplicity annotations such as x :: a %p, \(x :: a %p) -> ....

  • All case, let and where statements consume their right-hand side, or scrutiny, Many times. That is, the following will not type check:

    g :: A %1 -> (A, B)
    h :: A %1 -> B %1 -> C
    
    f :: A %1 -> C
    f x =
      case g x of
        (y, z) -> h y z
    

    This can be worked around by defining extra functions which are specified to be linear, such as:

    g :: A %1 -> (A, B)
    h :: A %1 -> B %1 -> C
    
    f :: A %1 -> C
    f x = f' (g x)
      where
        f' :: (A, B) %1 -> C
        f' (y, z) = h y z
    
  • There is no support for linear pattern synonyms.

  • @-patterns and view patterns are not linear.

  • The projection function for a record with a single linear field should be multiplicity-polymorphic; currently it’s unrestricted.

  • Attempting to use of linear types in Template Haskell will probably not work.

6.4.17.4. Design and further reading