Commit Graph

10 Commits

Author SHA1 Message Date
Neil Brown
e72e95625a Added a checkDepthM2 function to the Traversal module 2008-05-17 12:44:55 +00:00
Adam Sampson
7a7e3e2b24 Make GenNavAST generate instances of a "Polyplate" class.
This provides transformM, which we can build applyX (etc.) on top of:
it takes a set of functions, and applies them wherever they could
match in a data structure, without automatically recursing. This is
done using a four(!)-argument typeclass, drawing inspiration from
Biplate.

The resulting 25,000-line set of instances takes a little while to
compile...
2008-05-10 16:27:46 +00:00
Adam Sampson
2d00b1e5c5 Optimise applyX a bit.
This avoids computing the transformation function each time we recurse.
2008-05-07 15:51:09 +00:00
Adam Sampson
0886ab9f9b Abstract the set of types that gmapMFor takes out to a type.
(No change in behaviour, yet.)
2008-04-08 23:13:58 +00:00
Adam Sampson
3da2ad1385 Provide combinators for generic traversals.
The types get hairier, but the code is much simpler!

I've left {check,apply}DepthM{,2} there for now, but reimplemented them in
terms of the new combinators.

Fixes #58.
2008-04-08 14:41:25 +00:00
Adam Sampson
7703eab52f Add applyExplicitM10.
Fortunately all of this will go away once I do the combinator change...
2008-04-07 21:34:34 +00:00
Adam Sampson
8bbca0f760 Add applyExplicitM9 (as a stopgap). 2008-04-04 12:10:32 +00:00
Adam Sampson
d9df114909 Rework gmapMFor so it takes a list of type keys.
This means we only need one gmapMFor function, and we do fewer calls to
typeKey, but we have to make typeKey available for use where it's called.
2008-04-02 15:09:07 +00:00
Adam Sampson
7d9110a9b0 Remove "Data t =>" qualifications from transformation types.
This is solely because GHC 6.6 doesn't like them (it complains about the type
variable already being in scope -- which it is, but there's nothing I can do
about that!). This doesn't lose any safety; if you try to write a
transformation for something that's not Data you'll find out when you try to
pass it to one of the application functions.
2008-04-01 12:31:20 +00:00
Adam Sampson
7525138c96 Defined types for tree traversals, and moved them to their own file.
We now have three kinds of canned tree traversals, all of which are smart about
which types they're applied to: explicit-descent transformations,
implicit-descent transformations, and implicit-descent checks. I've only
provided depth-first application of the latter two, but we could do
breadth-first in the future if necessary.
2008-04-01 12:01:09 +00:00