| Copyright | (C) 2011-2015 Edward Kmett | 
|---|---|
| License | BSD-style (see the file LICENSE) | 
| Maintainer | Edward Kmett <ekmett@gmail.com> | 
| Stability | experimental | 
| Portability | non-portable | 
| Safe Haskell | Unsafe | 
| Language | Haskell2010 | 
Data.Constraint.Unsafe
Contents
Description
Synopsis
- class a ~R# b => Coercible (a :: k0) (b :: k0)
- unsafeCoerceConstraint :: a :- b
- unsafeDerive :: Coercible n o => (o -> n) -> t o :- t n
- unsafeUnderive :: Coercible n o => (o -> n) -> t n :- t o
- unsafeApplicative :: forall m a. Monad m => (Applicative m => m a) -> m a
- unsafeAlternative :: forall m a. MonadPlus m => (Alternative m => m a) -> m a
Documentation
class a ~R# b => Coercible (a :: k0) (b :: k0) #
Coercible is a two-parameter class that has instances for types a and b if
      the compiler can infer that they have the same representation. This class
      does not have regular instances; instead they are created on-the-fly during
      type-checking. Trying to manually declare an instance of Coercible
      is an error.
Nevertheless one can pretend that the following three kinds of instances exist. First, as a trivial base-case:
instance Coercible a a
Furthermore, for every type constructor there is
      an instance that allows to coerce under the type constructor. For
      example, let D be a prototypical type constructor (data or
      newtype) with three type arguments, which have roles nominal,
      representational resp. phantom. Then there is an instance of
      the form
instance Coercible b b' => Coercible (D a b c) (D a b' c')
Note that the nominal type arguments are equal, the
      representational type arguments can differ, but need to have a
      Coercible instance themself, and the phantom type arguments can be
      changed arbitrarily.
The third kind of instance exists for every newtype NT = MkNT T and
      comes in two variants, namely
instance Coercible a T => Coercible a NT
instance Coercible T b => Coercible NT b
This instance is only usable if the constructor MkNT is in scope.
If, as a library author of a type constructor like Set a, you
      want to prevent a user of your module to write
      coerce :: Set T -> Set NT,
      you need to set the role of Set's type parameter to nominal,
      by writing
type role Set nominal
For more details about this feature, please refer to Safe Coercions by Joachim Breitner, Richard A. Eisenberg, Simon Peyton Jones and Stephanie Weirich.
Since: ghc-prim-4.7.0.0
unsafeCoerceConstraint :: a :- b Source #
Coerce a dictionary unsafely from one type to another
unsafeDerive :: Coercible n o => (o -> n) -> t o :- t n Source #
Coerce a dictionary unsafely from one type to a newtype of that type
unsafeUnderive :: Coercible n o => (o -> n) -> t n :- t o Source #
Coerce a dictionary unsafely from a newtype of a type to the base type
Sugar
unsafeApplicative :: forall m a. Monad m => (Applicative m => m a) -> m a Source #
Construct an Applicative instance from a Monad
unsafeAlternative :: forall m a. MonadPlus m => (Alternative m => m a) -> m a Source #
Construct an Alternative instance from a MonadPlus