polysemy

Dedication
The word 'good' has many meanings. For example, if a man were to shoot his
grandmother at a range of five hundred yards, I should call him a good shot,
but not necessarily a good man.
Gilbert K. Chesterton
Overview
polysemy is a library for writing high-power, low-boilerplate, zero-cost,
domain specific languages. It allows you to separate your business logic from
your implementation details. And in doing so, polysemy lets you turn your
implementation code into reusable library code.
It's like mtl but composes better, requires less boilerplate, and avoids the
O(n^2) instances problem.
It's like freer-simple but more powerful and 35x faster.
It's like fused-effects but with an order of magnitude less boilerplate.
Features
- Effects are higher-order, meaning it's trivial to write
bracket and local
as first-class effects.
- Effects are low-boilerplate, meaning you can create new effects in a
single-digit number of lines. New interpreters are nothing but functions and
pattern matching.
- Effects are zero-cost, meaning that GHC1 can optimize
away the entire abstraction at compile time.
1: Unfortunately this is not true in GHC 8.6.3, but
will be true as soon as my patch lands.
Examples
Make sure you read the Necessary Language
Extensions
before trying these yourself!
Console effect:
{-# LANGUAGE TemplateHaskell #-}
import Polysemy
data Console m a where
ReadTTY :: Console m String
WriteTTY :: String -> Console m ()
makeSem ''Console
runConsoleIO :: Member (Lift IO) r => Sem (Console ': r) a -> Sem r a
runConsoleIO = interpret $ \case
ReadTTY -> sendM getLine
WriteTTY msg -> sendM $ putStrLn msg
Resource effect:
{-# LANGUAGE TemplateHaskell #-}
import qualified Control.Exception as X
import Polysemy
data Resource m a where
Bracket :: m a -> (a -> m ()) -> (a -> m b) -> Resource m b
makeSem ''Resource
runResource
:: forall r a
. Member (Lift IO) r
=> (∀ x. Sem r x -> IO x)
-> Sem (Resource ': r) a
-> Sem r a
runResource finish = interpretH $ \case
Bracket alloc dealloc use -> do
a <- runT alloc
d <- bindT dealloc
u <- bindT use
let runIt :: Sem (Resource ': r) x -> IO x
runIt = finish .@ runResource
sendM $ X.bracket (runIt a) (runIt . d) (runIt . u)
Easy.
Friendly Error Messages
Free monad libraries aren't well known for their ease-of-use. But following in
the shoes of freer-simple, polysemy takes a serious stance on providing
helpful error messages.
For example, the library exposes both the interpret and interpretH
combinators. If you use the wrong one, the library's got your back:
runResource
:: forall r a
. Member (Lift IO) r
=> (∀ x. Sem r x -> IO x)
-> Sem (Resource ': r) a
-> Sem r a
runResource finish = interpret $ \case
...
makes the helpful suggestion:
• 'Resource' is higher-order, but 'interpret' can help only
with first-order effects.
Fix:
use 'interpretH' instead.
• In the expression:
interpret
$ \case
Likewise it will give you tips on what to do if you forget a TypeApplication
or forget to handle an effect.
Don't like helpful errors? That's OK too --- just flip the error-messages flag
and enjoy the raw, unadulterated fury of the typesystem.
Necessary Language Extensions
You're going to want to stick all of this into your package.yaml file.
ghc-options: -O2 -flate-specialise -fspecialise-aggressively
default-extensions:
- DataKinds
- FlexibleContexts
- GADTs
- LambdaCase
- PolyKinds
- RankNTypes
- ScopedTypeVariables
- TypeApplications
- TypeOperators
- TypeFamilies