Why do We Need Sum Types?

前端 未结 4 589
广开言路
广开言路 2021-02-08 05:09

Imagine a language which doesn\'t allow multiple value constructors for a data type. Instead of writing

data Color = White | Black | Blue

we wo

4条回答
  •  难免孤独
    2021-02-08 05:46

    This is an idea I've thought a lot about myself: a language with “first-class type algebra”. Pretty sure we could do about everything this way that we do in Haskell. Certainly if these disjunctions were, like Haskell alternatives, tagged unions; then you could directly rewrite any ADT to use them. In fact GHC can do this for you: if you derive a Generic instance, a variant type will be represented by a :+: construct, which is in essence just Either.

    I'm not so sure if untagged unions would also do. As long as you require the types participating in a sum to be discernibly different, the explicit tagging should in principle not be necessary. The language would then need a convenient way to match on types at runtime. Sounds a lot like what dynamic languages do – obviously comes with quite some overhead though.
    The biggest problem would be that if the types on both sides of :|: must be unequal then you lose parametricity, which is one of Haskell's nicest traits.

提交回复
热议问题