| Safe Haskell | Safe-Inferred |
|---|---|
| Language | Haskell2010 |
Polysemy.Conc.Interpreter.Events
Description
Synopsis
- type EventConsumer e = Scoped_ (Consume e)
- interpretConsumeChan :: forall e r. Member (Embed IO) r => OutChan e -> InterpreterFor (Consume e) r
- interpretEventsInChan :: forall e r. Member (Embed IO) r => InChan e -> InterpreterFor (Events e) r
- interpretEventsChan :: forall e r. Members [Resource, Race, Async, Embed IO] r => InterpretersFor [Events e, EventConsumer e] r
Documentation
type EventConsumer e = Scoped_ (Consume e) Source #
Convenience alias for the consumer effect.
interpretConsumeChan :: forall e r. Member (Embed IO) r => OutChan e -> InterpreterFor (Consume e) r Source #
Interpret Consume by reading from an OutChan.
Used internally by interpretEventsChan, not safe to use directly.
interpretEventsInChan :: forall e r. Member (Embed IO) r => InChan e -> InterpreterFor (Events e) r Source #
Interpret Events by writing to an InChan.
Used internally by interpretEventsChan, not safe to use directly.
When the channel queue is full, this silently discards events.
interpretEventsChan :: forall e r. Members [Resource, Race, Async, Embed IO] r => InterpretersFor [Events e, EventConsumer e] r Source #
Interpret Events and Consume together by connecting them to the two ends of an unagi channel.
Consume is only interpreted in a Scoped manner, ensuring that a new duplicate of the channel is
created so that all consumers see all events (from the moment they are connected).
This should be used in conjunction with subscribe:
interpretEventsChan do
async $ subscribe do
putStrLn =<< consume
publish "hello"
Whenever subscribe creates a new scope, this interpreter calls dupChan and passes the
duplicate to interpretConsumeChan.