| Copyright | (C) 2011-2015 Edward Kmett |
|---|---|
| License | BSD-style (see the file LICENSE) |
| Maintainer | Edward Kmett <[email protected]> |
| Stability | provisional |
| Portability | portable |
| Safe Haskell | Safe |
| Language | Haskell2010 |
Data.Bifunctor.Apply
Contents
Description
Synopsis
- class Bifunctor (p :: Type -> Type -> Type) where
- class Bifunctor p => Biapply p where
- (<<$>>) :: (a -> b) -> a -> b
- (<<..>>) :: Biapply p => p a c -> p (a -> b) (c -> d) -> p b d
- bilift2 :: Biapply w => (a -> b -> c) -> (d -> e -> f) -> w a d -> w b e -> w c f
- bilift3 :: Biapply w => (a -> b -> c -> d) -> (e -> f -> g -> h) -> w a e -> w b f -> w c g -> w d h
Biappliable bifunctors
class Bifunctor (p :: Type -> Type -> Type) where Source #
A bifunctor is a type constructor that takes
two type arguments and is a functor in both arguments. That
is, unlike with Functor, a type constructor such as Either
does not need to be partially applied for a Bifunctor
instance, and the methods in this class permit mapping
functions over the Left value or the Right value,
or both at the same time.
Formally, the class Bifunctor represents a bifunctor
from Hask -> Hask.
Intuitively it is a bifunctor where both the first and second arguments are covariant.
You can define a Bifunctor by either defining bimap or by
defining both first and second.
If you supply bimap, you should ensure that:
bimapidid≡id
If you supply first and second, ensure:
firstid≡idsecondid≡id
If you supply both, you should also ensure:
bimapf g ≡firstf.secondg
These ensure by parametricity:
bimap(f.g) (h.i) ≡bimapf h.bimapg ifirst(f.g) ≡firstf.firstgsecond(f.g) ≡secondf.secondg
Since: base-4.8.0.0
Methods
bimap :: (a -> b) -> (c -> d) -> p a c -> p b d Source #
Map over both arguments at the same time.
bimapf g ≡firstf.secondg
Examples
>>>bimap toUpper (+1) ('j', 3)('J',4)
>>>bimap toUpper (+1) (Left 'j')Left 'J'
>>>bimap toUpper (+1) (Right 3)Right 4
Instances
class Bifunctor p => Biapply p where Source #
Minimal complete definition
Methods
(<<.>>) :: p (a -> b) (c -> d) -> p a c -> p b d infixl 4 Source #