template-haskell-2.10.0.0: Support library for Template Haskell

Copyright(c) The University of Glasgow 2003
LicenseBSD-style (see the file libraries/base/LICENSE)
Maintainerlibraries@haskell.org
Stabilityexperimental
Portabilityportable
Safe HaskellNone
LanguageHaskell2010

Language.Haskell.TH.Syntax

Description

Abstract syntax definitions for Template Haskell.

Synopsis

Documentation

class Monad m => Quasi m where Source

Methods

qNewName Source

Arguments

:: String 
-> m Name

Fresh names

qReport Source

Arguments

:: Bool 
-> String 
-> m ()

Report an error (True) or warning (False) ...but carry on; use fail to stop

qRecover Source

Arguments

:: m a

the error handler

-> m a

action which may fail

-> m a

Recover from the monadic fail

qLookupName :: Bool -> String -> m (Maybe Name) Source

qReify :: Name -> m Info Source

qReifyInstances :: Name -> [Type] -> m [Dec] Source

qReifyRoles :: Name -> m [Role] Source

qReifyAnnotations :: Data a => AnnLookup -> m [a] Source

qReifyModule :: Module -> m ModuleInfo Source

qLocation :: m Loc Source

qRunIO :: IO a -> m a Source

Input/output (dangerous)

qAddDependentFile :: FilePath -> m () Source

qAddTopDecls :: [Dec] -> m () Source

qAddModFinalizer :: Q () -> m () Source

qGetQ :: Typeable a => m (Maybe a) Source

qPutQ :: Typeable a => a -> m () Source

Instances

newtype Q a Source

Constructors

Q 

Fields

unQ :: forall m. Quasi m => m a
 

runQ :: Quasi m => Q a -> m a Source

newtype TExp a Source

Constructors

TExp 

Fields

unType :: Exp
 

unTypeQ :: Q (TExp a) -> Q Exp Source

newName :: String -> Q Name Source

Generate a fresh name, which cannot be captured.

For example, this:

f = $(do
  nm1 <- newName "x"
  let nm2 = mkName "x"
  return (LamE [VarP nm1] (LamE [VarP nm2] (VarE nm1)))
 )

will produce the splice

f = \x0 -> \x -> x0

In particular, the occurrence VarE nm1 refers to the binding VarP nm1, and is not captured by the binding VarP nm2.

Although names generated by newName cannot be captured, they can capture other names. For example, this:

g = $(do
  nm1 <- newName "x"
  let nm2 = mkName "x"
  return (LamE [VarP nm2] (LamE [VarP nm1] (VarE nm2)))
 )

will produce the splice

g = \x -> \x0 -> x0

since the occurrence VarE nm2 is captured by the innermost binding of x, namely VarP nm1.

report :: Bool -> String -> Q () Source

Deprecated: Use reportError or reportWarning instead

Report an error (True) or warning (False), but carry on; use fail to stop.

reportError :: String -> Q () Source

Report an error to the user, but allow the current splice's computation to carry on. To abort the computation, use fail.

reportWarning :: String -> Q () Source

Report a warning to the user, and carry on.

recover Source

Arguments

:: Q a

handler to invoke on failure

-> Q a

computation to run

-> Q a 

Recover from errors raised by reportError or fail.

lookupTypeName :: String -> Q (Maybe Name) Source

Look up the given name in the (type namespace of the) current splice's scope. See Language.Haskell.TH.Syntax for more details.

lookupValueName :: String -> Q (Maybe Name) Source

Look up the given name in the (value namespace of the) current splice's scope. See Language.Haskell.TH.Syntax for more details.

The functions lookupTypeName and lookupValueName provide a way to query the current splice's context for what names are in scope. The function lookupTypeName queries the type namespace, whereas lookupValueName queries the value namespace, but the functions are otherwise identical.

A call lookupValueName s will check if there is a value with name s in scope at the current splice's location. If there is, the Name of this value is returned; if not, then Nothing is returned.

The returned name cannot be "captured". For example:

f = "global"
g = $( do
         Just nm <- lookupValueName "f"
         [| let f = "local" in $( varE nm ) |]

In this case, g = "global"; the call to lookupValueName returned the global f, and this name was not captured by the local definition of f.

The lookup is performed in the context of the top-level splice being run. For example:

f = "global"
g = $( [| let f = "local" in
           $(do
               Just nm <- lookupValueName "f"
               varE nm
            ) |] )

Again in this example, g = "global", because the call to lookupValueName queries the context of the outer-most $(...).

Operators should be queried without any surrounding parentheses, like so:

lookupValueName "+"

Qualified names are also supported, like so:

lookupValueName "Prelude.+"
lookupValueName "Prelude.map"

reify :: Name -> Q Info Source

reify looks up information about the Name.

It is sometimes useful to construct the argument name using lookupTypeName or lookupValueName to ensure that we are reifying from the right namespace. For instance, in this context:

data D = D

which D does reify (mkName "D") return information about? (Answer: D-the-type, but don't rely on it.) To ensure we get information about D-the-value, use lookupValueName:

do
  Just nm <- lookupValueName "D"
  reify nm

and to get information about D-the-type, use lookupTypeName.

reifyInstances :: Name -> [Type] -> Q [InstanceDec] Source

reifyInstances nm tys returns a list of visible instances of nm tys. That is, if nm is the name of a type class, then all instances of this class at the types tys are returned. Alternatively, if nm is the name of a data family or type family, all instances of this family at the types tys are returned.

reifyRoles :: Name -> Q [Role] Source

reifyRoles nm returns the list of roles associated with the parameters of the tycon nm. Fails if nm cannot be found or is not a tycon. The returned list should never contain InferR.

reifyAnnotations :: Data a => AnnLookup -> Q [a] Source

reifyAnnotations target returns the list of annotations associated with target. Only the annotations that are appropriately typed is returned. So if you have Int and String annotations for the same target, you have to call this function twice.

reifyModule :: Module -> Q ModuleInfo Source

reifyModule mod looks up information about module mod. To look up the current module, call this function with the return value of thisModule.

isInstance :: Name -> [Type] -> Q Bool Source

Is the list of instances returned by reifyInstances nonempty?

location :: Q Loc Source

The location at which this computation is spliced.

runIO :: IO a -> Q a Source

The runIO function lets you run an I/O computation in the Q monad. Take care: you are guaranteed the ordering of calls to runIO within a single Q computation, but not about the order in which splices are run.

Note: for various murky reasons, stdout and stderr handles are not necessarily flushed when the compiler finishes running, so you should flush them yourself.

addDependentFile :: FilePath -> Q () Source

Record external files that runIO is using (dependent upon). The compiler can then recognize that it should re-compile the Haskell file when an external file changes.

Expects an absolute file path.

Notes:

  • ghc -M does not know about these dependencies - it does not execute TH.
  • The dependency is based on file content, not a modification time

addTopDecls :: [Dec] -> Q () Source

Add additional top-level declarations. The added declarations will be type checked along with the current declaration group.

addModFinalizer :: Q () -> Q () Source

Add a finalizer that will run in the Q monad after the current module has been type checked. This only makes sense when run within a top-level splice.

getQ :: Typeable a => Q (Maybe a) Source

Get state from the Q monad.

putQ :: Typeable a => a -> Q () Source

Replace the state in the Q monad.

returnQ :: a -> Q a Source

bindQ :: Q a -> (a -> Q b) -> Q b Source

sequenceQ :: [Q a] -> Q [a] Source

class Lift t where Source

Methods

lift :: t -> Q Exp Source

Instances

Lift Bool 
Lift Char 
Lift Double 
Lift Float 
Lift Int 
Lift Int8 
Lift Int16 
Lift Int32 
Lift Int64 
Lift Integer 
Lift Word 
Lift Word8 
Lift Word16 
Lift Word32 
Lift Word64 
Lift () 
Lift Natural 
Lift a => Lift [a] 
Integral a => Lift (Ratio a) 
Lift a => Lift (Maybe a) 
(Lift a, Lift b) => Lift (Either a b) 
(Lift a, Lift b) => Lift (a, b) 
(Lift a, Lift b, Lift c) => Lift (a, b, c) 
(Lift a, Lift b, Lift c, Lift d) => Lift (a, b, c, d) 
(Lift a, Lift b, Lift c, Lift d, Lift e) => Lift (a, b, c, d, e) 
(Lift a, Lift b, Lift c, Lift d, Lift e, Lift f) => Lift (a, b, c, d, e, f) 
(Lift a, Lift b, Lift c, Lift d, Lift e, Lift f, Lift g) => Lift (a, b, c, d, e, f, g) 

data Module Source

Obtained from reifyModule and thisModule.

Constructors

Module PkgName ModName 

Much of Name API is concerned with the problem of name capture, which can be seen in the following example.

f expr = [| let x = 0 in $expr |]
...
g x = $( f [| x |] )
h y = $( f [| y |] )

A naive desugaring of this would yield:

g x = let x = 0 in x
h y = let x = 0 in y

All of a sudden, g and h have different meanings! In this case, we say that the x in the RHS of g has been captured by the binding of x in f.

What we actually want is for the x in f to be distinct from the x in g, so we get the following desugaring:

g x = let x' = 0 in x
h y = let x' = 0 in y

which avoids name capture as desired.

In the general case, we say that a Name can be captured if the thing it refers to can be changed by adding new declarations.

data Name Source

An abstract type representing names in the syntax tree.

Names can be constructed in several ways, which come with different name-capture guarantees (see Language.Haskell.TH.Syntax for an explanation of name capture):

  • the built-in syntax 'f and ''T can be used to construct names, The expression 'f gives a Name which refers to the value f currently in scope, and ''T gives a Name which refers to the type T currently in scope. These names can never be captured.
  • lookupValueName and lookupTypeName are similar to 'f and ''T respectively, but the Names are looked up at the point where the current splice is being run. These names can never be captured.
  • newName monadically generates a new name, which can never be captured.
  • mkName generates a capturable name.

Names constructed using newName and mkName may be used in bindings (such as let x = ... or x -> ...), but names constructed using lookupValueName, lookupTypeName, 'f, ''T may not.

Constructors

Name OccName NameFlavour 

data NameFlavour Source

Constructors

NameS

An unqualified name; dynamically bound

NameQ ModName

A qualified name; dynamically bound

NameU !Int

A unique local name

NameL !Int

Local name bound outside of the TH AST

NameG NameSpace PkgName ModName

Global name bound outside of the TH AST: An original name (occurrences only, not binders) Need the namespace too to be sure which thing we are naming

data NameSpace Source

Constructors

VarName

Variables

DataName

Data constructors

TcClsName

Type constructors and classes; Haskell has them in the same name space for now.

type Uniq = Int Source

nameBase :: Name -> String Source

The name without its module prefix

nameModule :: Name -> Maybe String Source

Module prefix of a name, if it exists

mkName :: String -> Name Source

Generate a capturable name. Occurrences of such names will be resolved according to the Haskell scoping rules at the occurrence site.

For example:

f = [| pi + $(varE (mkName "pi")) |]
...
g = let pi = 3 in $f

In this case, g is desugared to

g = Prelude.pi + 3

Note that mkName may be used with qualified names:

mkName "Prelude.pi"

See also dyn for a useful combinator. The above example could be rewritten using dyn as

f = [| pi + $(dyn "pi") |]

mkNameU :: String -> Uniq -> Name Source

Only used internally

mkNameL :: String -> Uniq -> Name Source

Only used internally

mkNameG :: NameSpace -> String -> String -> String -> Name Source

Used for 'x etc, but not available to the programmer

data NameIs Source

Constructors

Alone 
Applied 
Infix 

tupleDataName :: Int -> Name Source

Tuple data constructor

tupleTypeName :: Int -> Name Source

Tuple type constructor

unboxedTupleDataName :: Int -> Name Source

Unboxed tuple data constructor

unboxedTupleTypeName :: Int -> Name Source

Unboxed tuple type constructor

type CharPos Source

Arguments

 = (Int, Int)

Line and character position

data Info Source

Obtained from reify in the Q Monad.

Constructors

ClassI Dec [InstanceDec]

A class, with a list of its visible instances

ClassOpI Name Type ParentName Fixity

A class method

TyConI Dec

A "plain" type constructor. "Fancier" type constructors are returned using PrimTyConI or FamilyI as appropriate

FamilyI Dec [InstanceDec]

A type or data family, with a list of its visible instances. A closed type family is returned with 0 instances.

PrimTyConI Name Arity Unlifted

A "primitive" type constructor, which can't be expressed with a Dec. Examples: (->), Int#.

DataConI Name Type ParentName Fixity

A data constructor

VarI Name Type (Maybe Dec) Fixity

A "value" variable (as opposed to a type variable, see TyVarI).

The Maybe Dec field contains Just the declaration which defined the variable -- including the RHS of the declaration -- or else Nothing, in the case where the RHS is unavailable to the compiler. At present, this value is _always_ Nothing: returning the RHS has not yet been implemented because of lack of interest.

TyVarI Name Type

A type variable.

The Type field contains the type which underlies the variable. At present, this is always VarT theName, but future changes may permit refinement of this.

data ModuleInfo Source

Obtained from reifyModule in the Q Monad.

Constructors

ModuleInfo [Module]

Contains the import list of the module.

type ParentName = Name Source

In ClassOpI and DataConI, name of the parent class or type

type Arity = Int Source

In PrimTyConI, arity of the type constructor

type Unlifted = Bool Source

In PrimTyConI, is the type constructor unlifted?

type InstanceDec = Dec Source

InstanceDec desribes a single instance of a class or type function. It is just a Dec, but guaranteed to be one of the following:

maxPrecedence :: Int Source

Highest allowed operator precedence for Fixity constructor (answer: 9)

defaultFixity :: Fixity Source

Default fixity: infixl 9

When implementing antiquotation for quasiquoters, one often wants to parse strings into expressions:

parse :: String -> Maybe Exp

But how should we parse a + b * c? If we don't know the fixities of + and *, we don't know whether to parse it as a + (b * c) or (a + b) * c.

In cases like this, use UInfixE or UInfixP, which stand for "unresolved infix expression" and "unresolved infix pattern". When the compiler is given a splice containing a tree of UInfixE applications such as

UInfixE
  (UInfixE e1 op1 e2)
  op2
  (UInfixE e3 op3 e4)

it will look up and the fixities of the relevant operators and reassociate the tree as necessary.

  • trees will not be reassociated across ParensE or ParensP, which are of use for parsing expressions like

    (a + b * c) + d * e
  • InfixE and InfixP expressions are never reassociated.
  • The UInfixE constructor doesn't support sections. Sections such as (a *) have no ambiguity, so InfixE suffices. For longer sections such as (a + b * c -), use an InfixE constructor for the outer-most section, and use UInfixE constructors for all other operators:

    InfixE
      Just (UInfixE ...a + b * c...)
      op
      Nothing

    Sections such as (a + b +) and ((a + b) +) should be rendered into Exps differently:

    (+ a + b)   ---> InfixE Nothing + (Just $ UInfixE a + b)
                       -- will result in a fixity error if (+) is left-infix
    (+ (a + b)) ---> InfixE Nothing + (Just $ ParensE $ UInfixE a + b)
                       -- no fixity errors
  • Quoted expressions such as

    [| a * b + c |] :: Q Exp
    [p| a : b : c |] :: Q Pat

    will never contain UInfixE, UInfixP, ParensE, or ParensP constructors.

data Lit Source

Constructors

CharL Char 
StringL String 
IntegerL Integer

Used for overloaded and non-overloaded literals. We don't have a good way to represent non-overloaded literals at the moment. Maybe that doesn't matter?

RationalL Rational 
IntPrimL Integer 
WordPrimL Integer 
FloatPrimL Rational 
DoublePrimL Rational 
StringPrimL [Word8]

A primitive C-style string, type Addr#

Instances

data Pat Source

Pattern in Haskell given in {}

Constructors

LitP Lit
{ 5 or c }
VarP Name
{ x }
TupP [Pat]
{ (p1,p2) }
UnboxedTupP [Pat]
{ () }
ConP Name [Pat]
data T1 = C1 t1 t2; {C1 p1 p1} = e
InfixP Pat Name Pat
foo ({x :+ y}) = e
UInfixP Pat Name Pat
foo ({x :+ y}) = e

See Language.Haskell.TH.Syntax

ParensP Pat
{(p)}

See Language.Haskell.TH.Syntax

TildeP Pat
{ ~p }
BangP Pat
{ !p }
AsP Name Pat
{ x @ p }
WildP
{ _ }
RecP Name [FieldPat]
f (Pt { pointx = x }) = g x
ListP [Pat]
{ [1,2,3] }
SigP Pat Type
{ p :: t }
ViewP Exp Pat
{ e -> p }

Instances

data Match Source

Constructors

Match Pat Body [Dec]
case e of { pat -> body where decs }

data Clause Source

Constructors

Clause [Pat] Body [Dec]
f { p1 p2 = body where decs }

data Exp Source

Constructors

VarE Name
{ x }
ConE Name
data T1 = C1 t1 t2; p = {C1} e1 e2
LitE Lit
{ 5 or c}
AppE Exp Exp
{ f x }
InfixE (Maybe Exp) Exp (Maybe Exp)
{x + y} or {(x+)} or {(+ x)} or {(+)}
UInfixE Exp Exp Exp
{x + y}

See Language.Haskell.TH.Syntax

ParensE Exp
{ (e) }

See Language.Haskell.TH.Syntax

LamE [Pat] Exp
{  p1 p2 -> e }
LamCaseE [Match]
{ case m1; m2 }
TupE [Exp]
{ (e1,e2) }
UnboxedTupE [Exp]
{ () }
CondE Exp Exp Exp
{ if e1 then e2 else e3 }
MultiIfE [(Guard, Exp)]
{ if | g1 -> e1 | g2 -> e2 }
LetE [Dec] Exp
{ let x=e1;   y=e2 in e3 }
CaseE Exp [Match]
{ case e of m1; m2 }
DoE [Stmt]
{ do { p <- e1; e2 }  }
CompE [Stmt]
{ [ (x,y) | x <- xs, y <- ys ] }

The result expression of the comprehension is the last of the Stmts, and should be a NoBindS.

E.g. translation:

[ f x | x <- xs ]
CompE [BindS (VarP x) (VarE xs), NoBindS (AppE (VarE f) (VarE x))]
ArithSeqE Range
{ [ 1 ,2 .. 10 ] }
ListE [Exp]
{ [1,2,3] }
SigE Exp Type
{ e :: t }
RecConE Name [FieldExp]
{ T { x = y, z = w } }
RecUpdE Exp [FieldExp]
{ (f x) { z = w } }
StaticE Exp
{ static e }

Instances

data Body Source

Constructors

GuardedB [(Guard, Exp)]
f p { | e1 = e2
      | e3 = e4 }
 where ds
NormalB Exp
f p { = e } where ds

Instances

data Guard Source

Constructors

NormalG Exp
f x { | odd x } = x
PatG [Stmt]
f x { | Just y <- x, Just z <- y } = z

data Stmt Source

Constructors

BindS Pat Exp 
LetS [Dec] 
NoBindS Exp 
ParS [[Stmt]] 

data Dec Source

Constructors

FunD Name [Clause]
{ f p1 p2 = b where decs }
ValD Pat Body [Dec]
{ p = b where decs }
DataD Cxt Name [TyVarBndr] [Con] [Name]
{ data Cxt x => T x = A x | B (T x)
       deriving (Z,W)}
NewtypeD Cxt Name [TyVarBndr] Con [Name]
{ newtype Cxt x => T x = A (B x)
       deriving (Z,W)}
TySynD Name [TyVarBndr] Type
{ type T x = (x,x) }
ClassD Cxt Name [TyVarBndr] [FunDep] [Dec]
{ class Eq a => Ord a where ds }
InstanceD Cxt Type [Dec]
{ instance Show w => Show [w]
       where ds }
SigD Name Type
{ length :: [a] -> Int }
ForeignD Foreign
{ foreign import ... }
{ foreign export ... }
InfixD Fixity Name
{ infix 3 foo }
PragmaD Pragma
{ {--} }
FamilyD FamFlavour Name [TyVarBndr] (Maybe Kind)
{ type family T a b c :: * }
DataInstD Cxt Name [Type] [Con] [Name]
{ data instance Cxt x => T [x] = A x
                                | B (T x)
       deriving (Z,W)}
NewtypeInstD Cxt Name [Type] Con [Name]
{ newtype instance Cxt x => T [x] = A (B x)
       deriving (Z,W)}
TySynInstD Name TySynEqn
{ type instance ... }
ClosedTypeFamilyD Name [TyVarBndr] (Maybe Kind) [TySynEqn]
{ type family F a b :: * where ... }
RoleAnnotD Name [Role]
{ type role T nominal representational }
StandaloneDerivD Cxt Type
{ deriving instance Ord a => Ord (Foo a) }
DefaultSigD Name Type
{ default size :: Data a => a -> Int }

Instances

data TySynEqn Source

One equation of a type family instance or closed type family. The arguments are the left-hand-side type patterns and the right-hand-side result.

Constructors

TySynEqn [Type] Type 

type Cxt Source

Arguments

 = [Pred]
(Eq a, Ord b)

type Pred = Type Source

Since the advent of ConstraintKinds, constraints are really just types. Equality constraints use the EqualityT constructor. Constraints may also be tuples of other constraints.

data Con Source

Constructors

NormalC Name [StrictType]
C Int a
RecC Name [VarStrictType]
C { v :: Int, w :: a }
InfixC StrictType Name StrictType
Int :+ a
ForallC [TyVarBndr] Cxt Con
forall a. Eq a => C [a]

Instances

data Type Source

Constructors

ForallT [TyVarBndr] Cxt Type
forall <vars>. <ctxt> -> <type>
AppT Type Type
T a b
SigT Type Kind
t :: k
VarT Name
a
ConT Name
T
PromotedT Name
'T
TupleT Int
(,), (,,), etc.
UnboxedTupleT Int
(), (), etc.
ArrowT
->
EqualityT
~
ListT
[]
PromotedTupleT Int
'(), '(,), '(,,), etc.
PromotedNilT
'[]
PromotedConsT
(':)
StarT
*
ConstraintT
Constraint
LitT TyLit
0,1,2, etc.

data Role Source

Role annotations

Constructors

NominalR
nominal
RepresentationalR
representational
PhantomR
phantom
InferR
_

data AnnLookup Source

Annotation target for reifyAnnotations

type Kind = Type Source

To avoid duplication between kinds and types, they are defined to be the same. Naturally, you would never have a type be StarT and you would never have a kind be SigT, but many of the other constructors are shared. Note that the kind Bool is denoted with ConT, not PromotedT. Similarly, tuple kinds are made with TupleT, not PromotedTupleT.