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Data.Dynamic | Portability | portable | Stability | experimental | Maintainer | libraries@haskell.org |
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Description |
The Dynamic interface provides basic support for dynamic types.
Operations for injecting values of arbitrary type into
a dynamically typed value, Dynamic, are provided, together
with operations for converting dynamic values into a concrete
(monomorphic) type.
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Synopsis |
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Documentation |
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module Data.Typeable |
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The Dynamic type
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A value of type Dynamic is an object encapsulated together with its type.
A Dynamic may only represent a monomorphic value; an attempt to
create a value of type Dynamic from a polymorphically-typed
expression will result in an ambiguity error (see toDyn).
Showing a value of type Dynamic returns a pretty-printed representation
of the object's type; useful for debugging.
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Converting to and from Dynamic
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Converts an arbitrary value into an object of type Dynamic.
The type of the object must be an instance of Typeable, which
ensures that only monomorphically-typed objects may be converted to
Dynamic. To convert a polymorphic object into Dynamic, give it
a monomorphic type signature. For example:
toDyn (id :: Int -> Int)
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:: Typeable a | | => Dynamic | the dynamically-typed object
| -> a | a default value
| -> a | returns: the value of the first argument, if
it has the correct type, otherwise the value of
the second argument.
| Converts a Dynamic object back into an ordinary Haskell value of
the correct type. See also fromDynamic.
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:: Typeable a | | => Dynamic | the dynamically-typed object
| -> Maybe a | returns: Just a, if the dynamically-typed
object has the correct type (and a is its value),
or Nothing otherwise.
| Converts a Dynamic object back into an ordinary Haskell value of
the correct type. See also fromDyn.
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Applying functions of dynamic type
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