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Published inDec 2023
Reading LevelBeginner
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ISBN-139781805128458
Edition1st Edition
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Tom Schrijvers
Tom Schrijvers
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Tom Schrijvers

Tom Schrijvers is a professor of computer science at KU Leuven in Belgium since 2014, and previously from 2011 until 2014 at Ghent University in Belgium. He has over 20 years of research experience in programming languages and has co-authored more than 100 scientific papers. Much of his research focuses on functional programming and on the Haskell programming language in particular: he has made many contributions to the language, its ecosystem and applications, and chaired academic events like the Haskell Symposium. At the same time, he has more than a decade of teaching experience (including functional programming with Haskell) and received several teaching awards.
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Functors

The first constructor type class we will encounter in this chapter is perhaps the simplest of all: Functor. This type class generalizes the higher-order map :: (a -> b) -> ([a] -> [b]).

Recall the definition of map:

Prelude
map :: (a -> b) -> ([a] -> [b])
map f [] = []
map f (x:xs) = f x : map f xs

The second pair of parentheses in the type signature of map can be dropped without changing the meaning. Nevertheless, I like to add them to emphasize that map lifts a function, (a -> b), on elements to a function, ([a] -> [b]), on lists.

The idea is that map transforms the elements of the list without changing the structure of the list itself:

*Main> map show [1,2,3,4]
["1","2","3","4"]

The Functor type class generalizes this idea from lists to other type constructors of the * -> * kind:

Prelude
class Functor f where
  fmap :: (a -> b) -> (f a -> f b)
  (<$...
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Soar with Haskell
Published in: Dec 2023Publisher: PacktISBN-13: 9781805128458

Author (1)

author image
Tom Schrijvers

Tom Schrijvers is a professor of computer science at KU Leuven in Belgium since 2014, and previously from 2011 until 2014 at Ghent University in Belgium. He has over 20 years of research experience in programming languages and has co-authored more than 100 scientific papers. Much of his research focuses on functional programming and on the Haskell programming language in particular: he has made many contributions to the language, its ecosystem and applications, and chaired academic events like the Haskell Symposium. At the same time, he has more than a decade of teaching experience (including functional programming with Haskell) and received several teaching awards.
Read more about Tom Schrijvers