{-# LANGUAGE Safe #-}

{-# LANGUAGE ExplicitNamespaces #-}

-- |
-- Module      :  GHC.Generics
-- Copyright   :  (c) Universiteit Utrecht 2010-2011, University of Oxford 2012-2014
-- License     :  see libraries/base/LICENSE
--
-- Maintainer  :  libraries@haskell.org
-- Stability   :  internal
-- Portability :  non-portable
--
-- @since 4.6.0.0
--
-- If you're using @GHC.Generics@, you should consider using the
-- <http://hackage.haskell.org/package/generic-deriving> package, which
-- contains many useful generic functions.

module GHC.Generics  (
-- * Introduction
--
-- |
--
-- Datatype-generic functions are based on the idea of converting values of
-- a datatype @T@ into corresponding values of a (nearly) isomorphic type @'Rep' T@.
-- The type @'Rep' T@ is
-- built from a limited set of type constructors, all provided by this module. A
-- datatype-generic function is then an overloaded function with instances
-- for most of these type constructors, together with a wrapper that performs
-- the mapping between @T@ and @'Rep' T@. By using this technique, we merely need
-- a few generic instances in order to implement functionality that works for any
-- representable type.
--
-- Representable types are collected in the 'Generic' class, which defines the
-- associated type 'Rep' as well as conversion functions 'from' and 'to'.
-- Typically, you will not define 'Generic' instances by hand, but have the compiler
-- derive them for you.

-- ** Representing datatypes
--
-- |
--
-- The key to defining your own datatype-generic functions is to understand how to
-- represent datatypes using the given set of type constructors.
--
-- Let us look at an example first:
--
-- @
-- data Tree a = Leaf a | Node (Tree a) (Tree a)
--   deriving 'Generic'
-- @
--
-- The above declaration (which requires the language pragma @DeriveGeneric@)
-- causes the following representation to be generated:
--
-- @
-- instance 'Generic' (Tree a) where
--   type 'Rep' (Tree a) =
--     'D1' ('MetaData \"Tree\" \"Main\" \"package-name\" 'False)
--       ('C1' ('MetaCons \"Leaf\" 'PrefixI 'False)
--          ('S1' ('MetaSel 'Nothing
--                          'NoSourceUnpackedness
--                          'NoSourceStrictness
--                          'DecidedLazy)
--                 ('Rec0' a))
--        ':+:'
--        'C1' ('MetaCons \"Node\" 'PrefixI 'False)
--          ('S1' ('MetaSel 'Nothing
--                          'NoSourceUnpackedness
--                          'NoSourceStrictness
--                          'DecidedLazy)
--                ('Rec0' (Tree a))
--           ':*:'
--           'S1' ('MetaSel 'Nothing
--                          'NoSourceUnpackedness
--                          'NoSourceStrictness
--                          'DecidedLazy)
--                ('Rec0' (Tree a))))
--   ...
-- @
--
-- /Hint:/ You can obtain information about the code being generated from GHC by passing
-- the @-ddump-deriv@ flag. In GHCi, you can expand a type family such as 'Rep' using
-- the @:kind!@ command.
--
-- This is a lot of information! However, most of it is actually merely meta-information
-- that makes names of datatypes and constructors and more available on the type level.
--
-- Here is a reduced representation for @Tree@ with nearly all meta-information removed,
-- for now keeping only the most essential aspects:
--
-- @
-- instance 'Generic' (Tree a) where
--   type 'Rep' (Tree a) =
--     'Rec0' a
--     ':+:'
--     ('Rec0' (Tree a) ':*:' 'Rec0' (Tree a))
-- @
--
-- The @Tree@ datatype has two constructors. The representation of individual constructors
-- is combined using the binary type constructor ':+:'.
--
-- The first constructor consists of a single field, which is the parameter @a@. This is
-- represented as @'Rec0' a@.
--
-- The second constructor consists of two fields. Each is a recursive field of type @Tree a@,
-- represented as @'Rec0' (Tree a)@. Representations of individual fields are combined using
-- the binary type constructor ':*:'.
--
-- Now let us explain the additional tags being used in the complete representation:
--
--    * The @'S1' ('MetaSel 'Nothing 'NoSourceUnpackedness 'NoSourceStrictness
--      'DecidedLazy)@ tag indicates several things. The @'Nothing@ indicates
--      that there is no record field selector associated with this field of
--      the constructor (if there were, it would have been marked @'Just
--      \"recordName\"@ instead). The other types contain meta-information on
--      the field's strictness:
--
--      * There is no @{\-\# UNPACK \#-\}@ or @{\-\# NOUNPACK \#-\}@ annotation
--        in the source, so it is tagged with @'NoSourceUnpackedness@.
--
--      * There is no strictness (@!@) or laziness (@~@) annotation in the
--        source, so it is tagged with @'NoSourceStrictness@.
--
--      * The compiler infers that the field is lazy, so it is tagged with
--        @'DecidedLazy@. Bear in mind that what the compiler decides may be
--        quite different from what is written in the source. See
--        'DecidedStrictness' for a more detailed explanation.
--
--      The @'MetaSel@ type is also an instance of the type class 'Selector',
--      which can be used to obtain information about the field at the value
--      level.
--
--    * The @'C1' ('MetaCons \"Leaf\" 'PrefixI 'False)@ and
--      @'C1' ('MetaCons \"Node\" 'PrefixI 'False)@ invocations indicate that the enclosed part is
--      the representation of the first and second constructor of datatype @Tree@, respectively.
--      Here, the meta-information regarding constructor names, fixity and whether
--      it has named fields or not is encoded at the type level. The @'MetaCons@
--      type is also an instance of the type class 'Constructor'. This type class can be used
--      to obtain information about the constructor at the value level.
--
--    * The @'D1' ('MetaData \"Tree\" \"Main\" \"package-name\" 'False)@ tag
--      indicates that the enclosed part is the representation of the
--      datatype @Tree@. Again, the meta-information is encoded at the type level.
--      The @'MetaData@ type is an instance of class 'Datatype', which
--      can be used to obtain the name of a datatype, the module it has been
--      defined in, the package it is located under, and whether it has been
--      defined using @data@ or @newtype@ at the value level.

-- ** Derived and fundamental representation types
--
-- |
--
-- There are many datatype-generic functions that do not distinguish between positions that
-- are parameters or positions that are recursive calls. There are also many datatype-generic
-- functions that do not care about the names of datatypes and constructors at all. To keep
-- the number of cases to consider in generic functions in such a situation to a minimum,
-- it turns out that many of the type constructors introduced above are actually synonyms,
-- defining them to be variants of a smaller set of constructors.

-- *** Individual fields of constructors: 'K1'
--
-- |
--
-- The type constructor 'Rec0' is a variant of 'K1':
--
-- @
-- type 'Rec0' = 'K1' 'R'
-- @
--
-- Here, 'R' is a type-level proxy that does not have any associated values.
--
-- There used to be another variant of 'K1' (namely @Par0@), but it has since
-- been deprecated.

-- *** Meta information: 'M1'
--
-- |
--
-- The type constructors 'S1', 'C1' and 'D1' are all variants of 'M1':
--
-- @
-- type 'S1' = 'M1' 'S'
-- type 'C1' = 'M1' 'C'
-- type 'D1' = 'M1' 'D'
-- @
--
-- The types 'S', 'C' and 'D' are once again type-level proxies, just used to create
-- several variants of 'M1'.

-- *** Additional generic representation type constructors
--
-- |
--
-- Next to 'K1', 'M1', ':+:' and ':*:' there are a few more type constructors that occur
-- in the representations of other datatypes.

-- **** Empty datatypes: 'V1'
--
-- |
--
-- For empty datatypes, 'V1' is used as a representation. For example,
--
-- @
-- data Empty deriving 'Generic'
-- @
--
-- yields
--
-- @
-- instance 'Generic' Empty where
--   type 'Rep' Empty =
--     'D1' ('MetaData \"Empty\" \"Main\" \"package-name\" 'False) 'V1'
-- @

-- **** Constructors without fields: 'U1'
--
-- |
--
-- If a constructor has no arguments, then 'U1' is used as its representation. For example
-- the representation of 'Bool' is
--
-- @
-- instance 'Generic' Bool where
--   type 'Rep' Bool =
--     'D1' ('MetaData \"Bool\" \"Data.Bool\" \"package-name\" 'False)
--       ('C1' ('MetaCons \"False\" 'PrefixI 'False) 'U1' ':+:' 'C1' ('MetaCons \"True\" 'PrefixI 'False) 'U1')
-- @

-- *** Representation of types with many constructors or many fields
--
-- |
--
-- As ':+:' and ':*:' are just binary operators, one might ask what happens if the
-- datatype has more than two constructors, or a constructor with more than two
-- fields. The answer is simple: the operators are used several times, to combine
-- all the constructors and fields as needed. However, users /should not rely on
-- a specific nesting strategy/ for ':+:' and ':*:' being used. The compiler is
-- free to choose any nesting it prefers. (In practice, the current implementation
-- tries to produce a more-or-less balanced nesting, so that the traversal of
-- the structure of the datatype from the root to a particular component can be
-- performed in logarithmic rather than linear time.)

-- ** Defining datatype-generic functions
--
-- |
--
-- A datatype-generic function comprises two parts:
--
--    1. /Generic instances/ for the function, implementing it for most of the representation
--       type constructors introduced above.
--
--    2. A /wrapper/ that for any datatype that is in `Generic`, performs the conversion
--       between the original value and its `Rep`-based representation and then invokes the
--       generic instances.
--
-- As an example, let us look at a function @encode@ that produces a naive, but lossless
-- bit encoding of values of various datatypes. So we are aiming to define a function
--
-- @
-- encode :: 'Generic' a => a -> [Bool]
-- @
--
-- where we use 'Bool' as our datatype for bits.
--
-- For part 1, we define a class @Encode'@. Perhaps surprisingly, this class is parameterized
-- over a type constructor @f@ of kind @* -> *@. This is a technicality: all the representation
-- type constructors operate with kind @* -> *@ as base kind. But the type argument is never
-- being used. This may be changed at some point in the future. The class has a single method,
-- and we use the type we want our final function to have, but we replace the occurrences of
-- the generic type argument @a@ with @f p@ (where the @p@ is any argument; it will not be used).
--
-- > class Encode' f where
-- >   encode' :: f p -> [Bool]
--
-- With the goal in mind to make @encode@ work on @Tree@ and other datatypes, we now define
-- instances for the representation type constructors 'V1', 'U1', ':+:', ':*:', 'K1', and 'M1'.

-- *** Definition of the generic representation types
--
-- |
--
-- In order to be able to do this, we need to know the actual definitions of these types:
--
-- @
-- data    'V1'        p                       -- lifted version of Empty
-- data    'U1'        p = 'U1'                  -- lifted version of ()
-- data    (':+:') f g p = 'L1' (f p) | 'R1' (g p) -- lifted version of 'Either'
-- data    (':*:') f g p = (f p) ':*:' (g p)     -- lifted version of (,)
-- newtype 'K1'    i c p = 'K1' { 'unK1' :: c }    -- a container for a c
-- newtype 'M1'  i t f p = 'M1' { 'unM1' :: f p }  -- a wrapper
-- @
--
-- So, 'U1' is just the unit type, ':+:' is just a binary choice like 'Either',
-- ':*:' is a binary pair like the pair constructor @(,)@, and 'K1' is a value
-- of a specific type @c@, and 'M1' wraps a value of the generic type argument,
-- which in the lifted world is an @f p@ (where we do not care about @p@).

-- *** Generic instances
--
-- |
--
-- To deal with the 'V1' case, we use the following code (which requires the pragma @EmptyCase@):
--
-- @
-- instance Encode' 'V1' where
--   encode' x = case x of { }
-- @
--
-- There are no values of type @V1 p@ to pass, so it is impossible for this
-- function to be invoked. One can ask why it is useful to define an instance
-- for 'V1' at all in this case? Well, an empty type can be used as an argument
-- to a non-empty type, and you might still want to encode the resulting type.
-- As a somewhat contrived example, consider @[Empty]@, which is not an empty
-- type, but contains just the empty list. The 'V1' instance ensures that we
-- can call the generic function on such types.
--
-- There is exactly one value of type 'U1', so encoding it requires no
-- knowledge, and we can use zero bits:
--
-- @
-- instance Encode' 'U1' where
--   encode' 'U1' = []
-- @
--
-- In the case for ':+:', we produce 'False' or 'True' depending on whether
-- the constructor of the value provided is located on the left or on the right:
--
-- @
-- instance (Encode' f, Encode' g) => Encode' (f ':+:' g) where
--   encode' ('L1' x) = False : encode' x
--   encode' ('R1' x) = True  : encode' x
-- @
--
-- (Note that this encoding strategy may not be reliable across different
-- versions of GHC. Recall that the compiler is free to choose any nesting
-- of ':+:' it chooses, so if GHC chooses @(a ':+:' b) ':+:' c@, then the
-- encoding for @a@ would be @[False, False]@, @b@ would be @[False, True]@,
-- and @c@ would be @[True]@. However, if GHC chooses @a ':+:' (b ':+:' c)@,
-- then the encoding for @a@ would be @[False]@, @b@ would be @[True, False]@,
-- and @c@ would be @[True, True]@.)
--
-- In the case for ':*:', we append the encodings of the two subcomponents:
--
-- @
-- instance (Encode' f, Encode' g) => Encode' (f ':*:' g) where
--   encode' (x ':*:' y) = encode' x ++ encode' y
-- @
--
-- The case for 'K1' is rather interesting. Here, we call the final function
-- @encode@ that we yet have to define, recursively. We will use another type
-- class @Encode@ for that function:
--
-- @
-- instance (Encode c) => Encode' ('K1' i c) where
--   encode' ('K1' x) = encode x
-- @
--
-- Note how we can define a uniform instance for 'M1', because we completely
-- disregard all meta-information:
--
-- @
-- instance (Encode' f) => Encode' ('M1' i t f) where
--   encode' ('M1' x) = encode' x
-- @
--
-- Unlike in 'K1', the instance for 'M1' refers to @encode'@, not @encode@.

-- *** The wrapper and generic default
--
-- |
--
-- We now define class @Encode@ for the actual @encode@ function:
--
-- @
-- class Encode a where
--   encode :: a -> [Bool]
--   default encode :: (Generic a, Encode' (Rep a)) => a -> [Bool]
--   encode x = encode' ('from' x)
-- @
--
-- The incoming @x@ is converted using 'from', then we dispatch to the
-- generic instances using @encode'@. We use this as a default definition
-- for @encode@. We need the @default encode@ signature because ordinary
-- Haskell default methods must not introduce additional class constraints,
-- but our generic default does.
--
-- Defining a particular instance is now as simple as saying
--
-- @
-- instance (Encode a) => Encode (Tree a)
-- @
--
-- The generic default is being used. In the future, it will hopefully be
-- possible to use @deriving Encode@ as well, but GHC does not yet support
-- that syntax for this situation.
--
-- Having @Encode@ as a class has the advantage that we can define
-- non-generic special cases, which is particularly useful for abstract
-- datatypes that have no structural representation. For example, given
-- a suitable integer encoding function @encodeInt@, we can define
--
-- @
-- instance Encode Int where
--   encode = encodeInt
-- @

-- *** Omitting generic instances
--
-- |
--
-- It is not always required to provide instances for all the generic
-- representation types, but omitting instances restricts the set of
-- datatypes the functions will work for:
--
--    * If no ':+:' instance is given, the function may still work for
--      empty datatypes or datatypes that have a single constructor,
--      but will fail on datatypes with more than one constructor.
--
--    * If no ':*:' instance is given, the function may still work for
--      datatypes where each constructor has just zero or one field,
--      in particular for enumeration types.
--
--    * If no 'K1' instance is given, the function may still work for
--      enumeration types, where no constructor has any fields.
--
--    * If no 'V1' instance is given, the function may still work for
--      any datatype that is not empty.
--
--    * If no 'U1' instance is given, the function may still work for
--      any datatype where each constructor has at least one field.
--
-- An 'M1' instance is always required (but it can just ignore the
-- meta-information, as is the case for @encode@ above).
--
-- ** Generic constructor classes
--
-- |
--
-- Datatype-generic functions as defined above work for a large class
-- of datatypes, including parameterized datatypes. (We have used @Tree@
-- as our example above, which is of kind @* -> *@.) However, the
-- 'Generic' class ranges over types of kind @*@, and therefore, the
-- resulting generic functions (such as @encode@) must be parameterized
-- by a generic type argument of kind @*@.
--
-- What if we want to define generic classes that range over type
-- constructors (such as 'Data.Functor.Functor',
-- 'Data.Traversable.Traversable', or 'Data.Foldable.Foldable')?

-- *** The 'Generic1' class
--
-- |
--
-- Like 'Generic', there is a class 'Generic1' that defines a
-- representation 'Rep1' and conversion functions 'from1' and 'to1',
-- only that 'Generic1' ranges over types of kind @* -> *@. (More generally,
-- it can range over types of kind @k -> *@, for any kind @k@, if the
-- @PolyKinds@ extension is enabled. More on this later.)
-- The 'Generic1' class is also derivable.
--
-- The representation 'Rep1' is ever so slightly different from 'Rep'.
-- Let us look at @Tree@ as an example again:
--
-- @
-- data Tree a = Leaf a | Node (Tree a) (Tree a)
--   deriving 'Generic1'
-- @
--
-- The above declaration causes the following representation to be generated:
--
-- @
-- instance 'Generic1' Tree where
--   type 'Rep1' Tree =
--     'D1' ('MetaData \"Tree\" \"Main\" \"package-name\" 'False)
--       ('C1' ('MetaCons \"Leaf\" 'PrefixI 'False)
--          ('S1' ('MetaSel 'Nothing
--                          'NoSourceUnpackedness
--                          'NoSourceStrictness
--                          'DecidedLazy)
--                'Par1')
--        ':+:'
--        'C1' ('MetaCons \"Node\" 'PrefixI 'False)
--          ('S1' ('MetaSel 'Nothing
--                          'NoSourceUnpackedness
--                          'NoSourceStrictness
--                          'DecidedLazy)
--                ('Rec1' Tree)
--           ':*:'
--           'S1' ('MetaSel 'Nothing
--                          'NoSourceUnpackedness
--                          'NoSourceStrictness
--                          'DecidedLazy)
--                ('Rec1' Tree)))
--   ...
-- @
--
-- The representation reuses 'D1', 'C1', 'S1' (and thereby 'M1') as well
-- as ':+:' and ':*:' from 'Rep'. (This reusability is the reason that we
-- carry around the dummy type argument for kind-@*@-types, but there are
-- already enough different names involved without duplicating each of
-- these.)
--
-- What's different is that we now use 'Par1' to refer to the parameter
-- (and that parameter, which used to be @a@), is not mentioned explicitly
-- by name anywhere; and we use 'Rec1' to refer to a recursive use of @Tree a@.

-- *** Representation of @* -> *@ types
--
-- |
--
-- Unlike 'Rec0', the 'Par1' and 'Rec1' type constructors do not
-- map to 'K1'. They are defined directly, as follows:
--
-- @
-- newtype 'Par1'   p = 'Par1' { 'unPar1' ::   p } -- gives access to parameter p
-- newtype 'Rec1' f p = 'Rec1' { 'unRec1' :: f p } -- a wrapper
-- @
--
-- In 'Par1', the parameter @p@ is used for the first time, whereas 'Rec1' simply
-- wraps an application of @f@ to @p@.
--
-- Note that 'K1' (in the guise of 'Rec0') can still occur in a 'Rep1' representation,
-- namely when the datatype has a field that does not mention the parameter.
--
-- The declaration
--
-- @
-- data WithInt a = WithInt Int a
--   deriving 'Generic1'
-- @
--
-- yields
--
-- @
-- instance 'Generic1' WithInt where
--   type 'Rep1' WithInt =
--     'D1' ('MetaData \"WithInt\" \"Main\" \"package-name\" 'False)
--       ('C1' ('MetaCons \"WithInt\" 'PrefixI 'False)
--         ('S1' ('MetaSel 'Nothing
--                         'NoSourceUnpackedness
--                         'NoSourceStrictness
--                         'DecidedLazy)
--               ('Rec0' Int)
--          ':*:'
--          'S1' ('MetaSel 'Nothing
--                          'NoSourceUnpackedness
--                          'NoSourceStrictness
--                          'DecidedLazy)
--               'Par1'))
-- @
--
-- If the parameter @a@ appears underneath a composition of other type constructors,
-- then the representation involves composition, too:
--
-- @
-- data Rose a = Fork a [Rose a]
-- @
--
-- yields
--
-- @
-- instance 'Generic1' Rose where
--   type 'Rep1' Rose =
--     'D1' ('MetaData \"Rose\" \"Main\" \"package-name\" 'False)
--       ('C1' ('MetaCons \"Fork\" 'PrefixI 'False)
--         ('S1' ('MetaSel 'Nothing
--                         'NoSourceUnpackedness
--                         'NoSourceStrictness
--                         'DecidedLazy)
--               'Par1'
--          ':*:'
--          'S1' ('MetaSel 'Nothing
--                          'NoSourceUnpackedness
--                          'NoSourceStrictness
--                          'DecidedLazy)
--               ([] ':.:' 'Rec1' Rose)))
-- @
--
-- where
--
-- @
-- newtype (':.:') f g p = 'Comp1' { 'unComp1' :: f (g p) }
-- @

-- *** Representation of @k -> *@ types
--
-- |
--
-- The 'Generic1' class can be generalized to range over types of kind
-- @k -> *@, for any kind @k@. To do so, derive a 'Generic1' instance with the
-- @PolyKinds@ extension enabled. For example, the declaration
--
-- @
-- data Proxy (a :: k) = Proxy deriving 'Generic1'
-- @
--
-- yields a slightly different instance depending on whether @PolyKinds@ is
-- enabled. If compiled without @PolyKinds@, then @'Rep1' Proxy :: * -> *@, but
-- if compiled with @PolyKinds@, then @'Rep1' Proxy :: k -> *@.

-- *** Representation of unlifted types
--
-- |
--
-- If one were to attempt to derive a Generic instance for a datatype with an
-- unlifted argument (for example, 'Int#'), one might expect the occurrence of
-- the 'Int#' argument to be marked with @'Rec0' 'Int#'@. This won't work,
-- though, since 'Int#' is of an unlifted kind, and 'Rec0' expects a type of
-- kind @*@.
--
-- One solution would be to represent an occurrence of 'Int#' with 'Rec0 Int'
-- instead. With this approach, however, the programmer has no way of knowing
-- whether the 'Int' is actually an 'Int#' in disguise.
--
-- Instead of reusing 'Rec0', a separate data family 'URec' is used to mark
-- occurrences of common unlifted types:
--
-- @
-- data family URec a p
--
-- data instance 'URec' ('Ptr' ()) p = 'UAddr'   { 'uAddr#'   :: 'Addr#'   }
-- data instance 'URec' 'Char'     p = 'UChar'   { 'uChar#'   :: 'Char#'   }
-- data instance 'URec' 'Double'   p = 'UDouble' { 'uDouble#' :: 'Double#' }
-- data instance 'URec' 'Int'      p = 'UFloat'  { 'uFloat#'  :: 'Float#'  }
-- data instance 'URec' 'Float'    p = 'UInt'    { 'uInt#'    :: 'Int#'    }
-- data instance 'URec' 'Word'     p = 'UWord'   { 'uWord#'   :: 'Word#'   }
-- @
--
-- Several type synonyms are provided for convenience:
--
-- @
-- type 'UAddr'   = 'URec' ('Ptr' ())
-- type 'UChar'   = 'URec' 'Char'
-- type 'UDouble' = 'URec' 'Double'
-- type 'UFloat'  = 'URec' 'Float'
-- type 'UInt'    = 'URec' 'Int'
-- type 'UWord'   = 'URec' 'Word'
-- @
--
-- The declaration
--
-- @
-- data IntHash = IntHash Int#
--   deriving 'Generic'
-- @
--
-- yields
--
-- @
-- instance 'Generic' IntHash where
--   type 'Rep' IntHash =
--     'D1' ('MetaData \"IntHash\" \"Main\" \"package-name\" 'False)
--       ('C1' ('MetaCons \"IntHash\" 'PrefixI 'False)
--         ('S1' ('MetaSel 'Nothing
--                         'NoSourceUnpackedness
--                         'NoSourceStrictness
--                         'DecidedLazy)
--               'UInt'))
-- @
--
-- Currently, only the six unlifted types listed above are generated, but this
-- may be extended to encompass more unlifted types in the future.

  -- * Generic representation types
    V1, U1(..), Par1(..), Rec1(..), K1(..), M1(..)
  , (:+:)(..), (:*:)(..), (:.:)(..)

  -- ** Unboxed representation types
  , URec(..)
  , type UAddr, type UChar, type UDouble
  , type UFloat, type UInt, type UWord

  -- ** Synonyms for convenience
  , Rec0, R
  , D1, C1, S1, D, C, S

  -- * Meta-information
  , Datatype(..), Constructor(..), Selector(..)
  , Fixity(..), FixityI(..), Associativity(..), prec
  , SourceUnpackedness(..), SourceStrictness(..), DecidedStrictness(..)
  , Meta(..)

  -- * Generic type classes
  , Generic(..)
  , Generic1(..)

  -- * Generic wrapper
  , Generically(..)
  , Generically1(..)
  ) where

import GHC.Internal.Generics