% % (c) The GRASP/AQUA Project, Glasgow University, 1992-1998 % \section[PrelInfo]{The @PrelInfo@ interface to the compiler's prelude knowledge} \begin{code}
{-# OPTIONS -fno-warn-tabs #-}
-- The above warning supression flag is a temporary kludge.
-- While working on this module you are encouraged to remove it and
-- detab the module (please do the detabbing in a separate patch). See
--     http://hackage.haskell.org/trac/ghc/wiki/Commentary/CodingStyle#TabsvsSpaces
-- for details

module PrelInfo (
        wiredInIds, ghcPrimIds,
        primOpRules, builtinRules,

        ghcPrimExports,
        wiredInThings, basicKnownKeyNames,
        primOpId,
        
        -- Random other things
        maybeCharLikeCon, maybeIntLikeCon,

        -- Class categories
        isNumericClass, isStandardClass

    ) where

#include "HsVersions.h"

import PrelNames
import PrelRules
import Avail
import PrimOp
import DataCon
import Id
import MkId
import TysPrim
import TysWiredIn
import HscTypes
import Class
import TyCon
import Util

import Data.Array
\end{code} %************************************************************************ %* * \subsection[builtinNameInfo]{Lookup built-in names} %* * %************************************************************************ Notes about wired in things ~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~ * Wired-in things are Ids\/TyCons that are completely known to the compiler. They are global values in GHC, (e.g. listTyCon :: TyCon). * A wired in Name contains the thing itself inside the Name: see Name.wiredInNameTyThing_maybe (E.g. listTyConName contains listTyCon. * The name cache is initialised with (the names of) all wired-in things * The type checker sees if the Name is wired in before looking up the name in the type environment. So the type envt itself contains no wired in things. * MkIface prunes out wired-in things before putting them in an interface file. So interface files never contain wired-in things. \begin{code}
wiredInThings :: [TyThing]
-- This list is used only to initialise HscMain.knownKeyNames
-- to ensure that when you say "Prelude.map" in your source code, you
-- get a Name with the correct known key (See Note [Known-key names])
wiredInThings		
  = concat
    [		-- Wired in TyCons and their implicit Ids
	  tycon_things
	, concatMap implicitTyThings tycon_things

		-- Wired in Ids
	, map AnId wiredInIds

		-- PrimOps
	, map (AnId . primOpId) allThePrimOps
    ]
  where
    tycon_things = map ATyCon ([funTyCon] ++ primTyCons ++ wiredInTyCons)
\end{code} We let a lot of "non-standard" values be visible, so that we can make sense of them in interface pragmas. It's cool, though they all have "non-standard" names, so they won't get past the parser in user code. %************************************************************************ %* * PrimOpIds %* * %************************************************************************ \begin{code}
primOpIds :: Array Int Id	
-- A cache of the PrimOp Ids, indexed by PrimOp tag
primOpIds = array (1,maxPrimOpTag) [ (primOpTag op, mkPrimOpId op) 
				   | op <- allThePrimOps ]

primOpId :: PrimOp -> Id
primOpId op = primOpIds ! primOpTag op
\end{code} %************************************************************************ %* * \subsection{Export lists for pseudo-modules (GHC.Prim)} %* * %************************************************************************ GHC.Prim "exports" all the primops and primitive types, some wired-in Ids. \begin{code}
ghcPrimExports :: [IfaceExport]
ghcPrimExports
 = map (Avail . idName) ghcPrimIds ++
   map (Avail . idName . primOpId) allThePrimOps ++
   [ AvailTC n [n] 
   | tc <- funTyCon : primTyCons, let n = tyConName tc  ]
\end{code} %************************************************************************ %* * \subsection{Built-in keys} %* * %************************************************************************ ToDo: make it do the ``like'' part properly (as in 0.26 and before). \begin{code}
maybeCharLikeCon, maybeIntLikeCon :: DataCon -> Bool
maybeCharLikeCon con = con `hasKey` charDataConKey
maybeIntLikeCon  con = con `hasKey` intDataConKey
\end{code} %************************************************************************ %* * \subsection{Class predicates} %* * %************************************************************************ \begin{code}
isNumericClass, isStandardClass :: Class -> Bool

isNumericClass     clas = classKey clas `is_elem` numericClassKeys
isStandardClass    clas = classKey clas `is_elem` standardClassKeys

is_elem :: Eq a => a -> [a] -> Bool
is_elem = isIn "is_X_Class"
\end{code}