ghc-9.4.1: The GHC API
Safe HaskellSafe-Inferred
LanguageHaskell2010

GHC.Rename.HsType

Synopsis

Documentation

data HsPatSigTypeScoping Source #

Constructors

AlwaysBind

Always bind any free tyvars of the given type, regardless of whether we have a forall at the top.

For pattern type sigs, we do want to bring those type variables into scope, even if there's a forall at the top which usually stops that happening, e.g:

\ (x :: forall a. a -> b) -> e

Here we do bring b into scope.

RULES can also use AlwaysBind, such as in the following example:

{-# RULES \"f\" forall (x :: forall a. a -> b). f x = ... b ... #-}

This only applies to RULES that do not explicitly bind their type variables. If a RULE explicitly quantifies its type variables, then NeverBind is used instead. See also Note [Pattern signature binders and scoping] in GHC.Hs.Type.

NeverBind

Never bind any free tyvars. This is used for RULES that have both explicit type and term variable binders, e.g.:

{-# RULES \"const\" forall a. forall (x :: a) y. const x y = x #-}

The presence of the type variable binder forall a. implies that the free variables in the types of the term variable binders x and y are not bound. In the example above, there are no such free variables, but if the user had written (y :: b) instead of y in the term variable binders, then b would be rejected for being out of scope. See also Note [Pattern signature binders and scoping] in GHC.Hs.Type.

bindHsOuterTyVarBndrs Source #

Arguments

:: OutputableBndrFlag flag 'Renamed 
=> HsDocContext 
-> Maybe assoc

Just _ => an associated type decl

-> FreeKiTyVars 
-> HsOuterTyVarBndrs flag GhcPs 
-> (HsOuterTyVarBndrs flag GhcRn -> RnM (a, FreeVars)) 
-> RnM (a, FreeVars) 

data WarnUnusedForalls Source #

Should GHC warn if a quantified type variable goes unused? Usually, the answer is "yes", but in the particular case of binding LHsQTyVars, we avoid emitting warnings. See Note [Suppress -Wunused-foralls when binding LHsQTyVars].

Instances

Instances details
Outputable WarnUnusedForalls Source # 
Instance details

Defined in GHC.Rename.HsType

rnImplicitTvOccs Source #

Arguments

:: Maybe assoc

Just _ => an associated type decl

-> FreeKiTyVars

Surface-syntax free vars that we will implicitly bind. May have duplicates, which are removed here.

-> ([Name] -> RnM (a, FreeVars)) 
-> RnM (a, FreeVars) 

Create new renamed type variables corresponding to source-level ones. Duplicates are permitted, but will be removed. This is intended especially for the case of handling the implicitly bound free variables of a type signature.

filterInScopeM :: FreeKiTyVars -> RnM FreeKiTyVars Source #

Filter out any type and kind variables that are already in scope in the the environment's LocalRdrEnv. Note that this includes named wildcards, which look like perfectly ordinary type variables at this point.

extractHsTyRdrTyVars :: LHsType GhcPs -> FreeKiTyVars Source #

extractHsTyRdrTyVars finds the type/kind variables of a HsType/HsKind. It's used when making the foralls explicit. See Note [Kind and type-variable binders]

extractHsTyRdrTyVarsKindVars :: LHsType GhcPs -> FreeKiTyVars Source #

Extracts the free type/kind variables from the kind signature of a HsType. This is used to implicitly quantify over k in type T = Nothing :: Maybe k. The left-to-right order of variables is preserved. See Note [Kind and type-variable binders] and Note [Ordering of implicit variables] and Note [Implicit quantification in type synonyms].

extractHsTysRdrTyVars :: [LHsType GhcPs] -> FreeKiTyVars -> FreeKiTyVars Source #

Extracts free type and kind variables from types in a list. When the same name occurs multiple times in the types, all occurrences are returned.

extractConDeclGADTDetailsTyVars :: HsConDeclGADTDetails GhcPs -> FreeKiTyVars -> FreeKiTyVars Source #

Extracts free type and kind variables from an argument in a GADT constructor, returning variable occurrences in left-to-right order. See Note [Ordering of implicit variables].

extractDataDefnKindVars :: HsDataDefn GhcPs -> FreeKiTyVars Source #

Get type/kind variables mentioned in the kind signature, preserving left-to-right order:

  • data T a (b :: k1) :: k2 -> k1 -> k2 -> Type -- result: [k2,k1]
  • data T a (b :: k1) -- result: []

See Note [Ordering of implicit variables].

nubL :: Eq a => [GenLocated l a] -> [GenLocated l a] Source #

nubN :: Eq a => [LocatedN a] -> [LocatedN a] Source #