The word 'good' has many meanings. For example, if a man were to shoot his grandmother at a range of five hundred yards, I should call him a good shot, but not necessarily a good man.
Gilbert K. Chesterton
polysemy
is a library for writing high-power, low-boilerplate, zero-cost,
domain specific languages. It allows you to separate your business logic from
your implementation details. And in doing so, polysemy
lets you turn your
implementation code into reusable library code.
It's like mtl
but composes better, requires less boilerplate, and avoids the
O(n^2) instances problem.
It's like freer-simple
but more powerful and 35x faster.
It's like fused-effects
but with an order of magnitude less boilerplate.
Additionally, unlike mtl
, polysemy
has no functional dependencies, so you
can use multiple copies of the same effect. This alleviates the need for ugly
hacks band-aids like classy
lenses,
the ReaderT
pattern and
nicely solves the trouble with typed
errors.
Concerned about type inference? Check out
polysemy-plugin,
which should perform just as well as mtl
's! Add polysemy-plugin
to your package.yaml
or .cabal file's dependencies section to use. Then turn it on with a pragma in your source-files:
{-# OPTIONS_GHC -fplugin=Polysemy.Plugin #-}
Or by adding -fplugin=Polysemy.Plugin
to your package.yaml/.cabal file ghc-options
section.
- Effects are higher-order, meaning it's trivial to write
bracket
andlocal
as first-class effects. - Effects are low-boilerplate, meaning you can create new effects in a single-digit number of lines. New interpreters are nothing but functions and pattern matching.
- Effects are zero-cost, meaning that GHC1 can optimize away the entire abstraction at compile time.
1: Unfortunately this is not true in GHC 8.6.3, but will be true in GHC 8.10.1.
- Raghu Kaippully wrote a beginner friendly tutorial.
- Paweł Szulc gave a great talk on how to start thinking about polysemy.
- I've given a talk on some of the performance implementation
- I've also written some blog posts on other implementation details.
Make sure you read the Necessary Language Extensions before trying these yourself!
Teletype effect:
{-# LANGUAGE TemplateHaskell #-}
{-# LANGUAGE LambdaCase, BlockArguments #-}
{-# LANGUAGE GADTs, FlexibleContexts, TypeOperators, DataKinds, PolyKinds #-}
import Polysemy
import Polysemy.Input
import Polysemy.Output
data Teletype m a where
ReadTTY :: Teletype m String
WriteTTY :: String -> Teletype m ()
makeSem ''Teletype
teletypeToIO :: Member (Embed IO) r => Sem (Teletype ': r) a -> Sem r a
teletypeToIO = interpret $ \case
ReadTTY -> embed getLine
WriteTTY msg -> embed $ putStrLn msg
runTeletypePure :: [String] -> Sem (Teletype ': r) a -> Sem r ([String], a)
runTeletypePure i
= runOutputMonoid pure -- For each WriteTTY in our program, consume an output by appending it to the list in a ([String], a)
. runInputList i -- Treat each element of our list of strings as a line of input
. reinterpret2 \case -- Reinterpret our effect in terms of Input and Output
ReadTTY -> maybe "" id <$> input
WriteTTY msg -> output msg
echo :: Member Teletype r => Sem r ()
echo = do
i <- readTTY
case i of
"" -> pure ()
_ -> writeTTY i >> echo
-- Let's pretend
echoPure :: [String] -> Sem '[] ([String], ())
echoPure = flip runTeletypePure echo
pureOutput :: [String] -> [String]
pureOutput = fst . run . echoPure
-- echo forever
main :: IO ()
main = runM . teletypeToIO $ echo
Resource effect:
{-# LANGUAGE TemplateHaskell #-}
{-# LANGUAGE LambdaCase, BlockArguments #-}
{-# LANGUAGE GADTs, FlexibleContexts, TypeOperators, DataKinds, PolyKinds, TypeApplications #-}
import Polysemy
import Polysemy.Input
import Polysemy.Output
import Polysemy.Error
import Polysemy.Resource
-- Using Teletype effect from above
data CustomException = ThisException | ThatException deriving Show
program :: Members '[Resource, Teletype, Error CustomException] r => Sem r ()
program = catch @CustomException work $ \e -> writeTTY ("Caught " ++ show e)
where work = bracket (readTTY) (const $ writeTTY "exiting bracket") $ \input -> do
writeTTY "entering bracket"
case input of
"explode" -> throw ThisException
"weird stuff" -> writeTTY input >> throw ThatException
_ -> writeTTY input >> writeTTY "no exceptions"
main :: IO (Either CustomException ())
main =
runFinal
. embedToFinal @IO
. resourceToIOFinal
. errorToIOFinal @CustomException
. teletypeToIO
$ program
Easy.
Free monad libraries aren't well known for their ease-of-use. But following in
the shoes of freer-simple
, polysemy
takes a serious stance on providing
helpful error messages.
For example, the library exposes both the interpret
and interpretH
combinators. If you use the wrong one, the library's got your back:
runResource
:: forall r a
. Sem (Resource ': r) a
-> Sem r a
runResource = interpret $ \case
...
makes the helpful suggestion:
• 'Resource' is higher-order, but 'interpret' can help only
with first-order effects.
Fix:
use 'interpretH' instead.
• In the expression:
interpret
$ \case
Likewise it will give you tips on what to do if you forget a TypeApplication
or forget to handle an effect.
Don't like helpful errors? That's OK too --- just flip the error-messages
flag
and enjoy the raw, unadulterated fury of the typesystem.
You're going to want to stick all of this into your package.yaml
file.
ghc-options: -O2 -flate-specialise -fspecialise-aggressively
default-extensions:
- DataKinds
- FlexibleContexts
- GADTs
- LambdaCase
- PolyKinds
- RankNTypes
- ScopedTypeVariables
- TypeApplications
- TypeOperators
- TypeFamilies
Several things need to be in place to fully realize our performance goals:
- GHC Version
- GHC 8.9+
- Your code
- The module you want to be optimized needs to import
Polysemy.Internal
somewhere in its dependency tree (sufficient toimport Polysemy
)
- The module you want to be optimized needs to import
- GHC Flags
-O
or-O2
-flate-specialise
(this should be automatically turned on by the plugin, but it's worth mentioning)
- Plugin
-fplugin=Polysemy.Plugin
- Additional concerns:
- additional core passes (turned on by the plugin)
The following is a non-exhaustive list of people and works that have had a
significant impact, directly or indirectly, on polysemy
’s design and
implementation:
- Oleg Kiselyov, Amr Sabry, and Cameron Swords — Extensible Effects: An alternative to monad transfomers
- Oleg Kiselyov and Hiromi Ishii — Freer Monads, More Extensible Effects
- Nicolas Wu, Tom Schrijvers, and Ralf Hinze — Effect Handlers in Scope
- Nicolas Wu and Tom Schrijvers — Fusion for Free: Efficient Algebraic Effect Handlers
- Andy Gill and other contributors —
mtl
- Rob Rix, Patrick Thomson, and other contributors —
fused-effects
- Alexis King and other contributors —
freer-simple