validated-literals

To disallow invalid input it is common to define (new)types with hidden data constructors. Forcing the user to go through a smart-constructor that enforces invariants and returns Maybe ResultType, preventing the construction of data with invalid values. However, it is also common to want to include literal values of such types in source text. Things of textual literals for HTML, HTTP, etc. In such cases smart-constructors force us to handle potential conversion failures at runtime, or abusing functions like fromJust to break away all the safety smart-constructors provide. All this despite the fact that we can statically know at compile time that the conversion will always succeed or always fails. This package provides a typeclasses for using TH to validate the correctness of provided literals at compile. This lets you define, e.g., newtype Even = Even Integer and write: This will check, at compile time, that the provided Integer is, in fact, even and unwrap it from Maybe, avoiding the runtime check.


Keywords
data, library, Propose Tags , ValidLiterals
License
BSD-3-Clause
Install
cabal install validated-literals-0.3.1

Documentation

validated-literals: Compile-time checking for partial smart-constructors

BSD3 Hackage hackage-ci Build Status

To disallow invalid input it is common to define (new)types with hidden data constructors. Forcing the user to go through a smart-constructor that enforces invariants and returns Maybe ResultType, preventing the construction of data with invalid values.

However, it is also common to want to include literal values of such types in source text. Things of textual literals for HTML, HTTP, etc. In such cases smart-constructors force us to handle potential conversion failures at runtime, or abusing functions like fromJust to break away all the safety smart-constructors provide. All this despite the fact that we can statically know at compile time that the conversion will always succeed or always fails.

This package provides a typeclasses for using TH to validate the correctness of provided literals at compile. This lets you define, e.g., newtype Even = Even Integer and write:

x :: Even
x = $$(valid 38)

This will check, at compile time, that the provided Integer is, in fact, even and unwrap it from Maybe, avoiding the runtime check.