Does * in (<*>) have a special meaning?

家住魔仙堡 提交于 2019-12-03 12:13:39

问题


Trying to expand my understanding about symbols in Haskell :

  • ($) : Function Application operator (Allow you to apply arguments over a function)
  • (&) : flipped version of Function Application Operator? (&) = flip ($)
  • (<>) : associative operator (You'll find it in Semigroups and Monoids)
  • (<$>) : function application ($) lifted over a Functor structure
  • (<&>) : flipped functor map

Can we make a link between (*) and (<*>)?

I don't understand the meaning of * actually...


回答1:


This is deliberate. <*> has characteristics of a tensor product. This is best seen in the list monad:

Prelude> (,) <$> ['a'..'e'] <*> [0..4]
[('a',0),('a',1),('a',2),('a',3),('a',4)
,('b',0),('b',1),('b',2),('b',3),('b',4)
,('c',0),('c',1),('c',2),('c',3),('c',4)
,('d',0),('d',1),('d',2),('d',3),('d',4)
,('e',0),('e',1),('e',2),('e',3),('e',4)]

More generally, applicative functors (aka monoidal functors) map from the product of two objects (i.e. product type, aka tuple or via currying two function arguments) behind the functor to the functor-result of a product before the functor. So it's a pretty product-ey operation indeed.

φA,B: F AF BF(AB)

...in Haskell,

φ :: (f a, f b) -> f (a,b)
φ = uncurry (liftA2 (,))
-- recall `liftA2 f x y = f <$> x <*> y`

or even

{-# LANGUAGE TypeOperators #-}
type x ⊗ y = (x,y)

φ :: f a ⊗ f b -> f (a⊗b)

To see the historical side, look into McBride and Paterson 2008 (doi:10.1017/S0956796807006326), the paper that first introduced the Applicative typeclass. They note

The Applicative class features the asymmetrical operation , but there is an equivalent symmetrical definition.

class Functor f -> Monoidal f where
    unit :: f ()
    (★) :: f a -> f b -> f (a,b)

These operations are clearly definable for any Applicative functor...

So, the <*> is an ASCII rendition of McBride and Paterson's operator, which in turn is an “applicativised” form of which the category theorists call, in uncurried form, φ.



来源:https://stackoverflow.com/questions/55513329/does-in-have-a-special-meaning

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