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How to do parallel "either-side" short-circuiting with "and" and "or"

Does haskell have a parallel "and" method

parAnd :: Bool -> Bool -> Bool

such that

(a `parAnd` b)

will spark the evaluation of a and b in parallel and return false as soon as either a or b evaluates to false (and not wait for the other one)?

Is there some way to implement such a thing?

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dspyz Avatar asked Jun 14 '14 19:06

dspyz


2 Answers

Normally, this is not possible. You can do something like

a `par` b `pseq` (a && b)

but if b evaluates to False, a is still fully evaluated.

However, this is possible with the unambiguous choice operator created by Conal Elliott for his Functional Reactive Programming (FRP) implementation. It's available on Hackage as unamb package and does exactly what you want. In particular, it contains

-- | Turn a binary commutative operation into one that tries both orders in
-- parallel. Useful when there are special cases that don't require
-- evaluating both arguments.
-- ...
parCommute :: (a -> a -> b) -> a -> a -> b

and also directly defines pand,por and other similar commutative functions, such that

pand undefined False   -> False
pand False undefined   -> False
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Petr Avatar answered Nov 05 '22 04:11

Petr


This is provided by Conal Elliott's unamb package. It uses unsafePerformIO under the covers to evaluate both a && b and b && a on separate threads, and returns when either produces a result.

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GS - Apologise to Monica Avatar answered Nov 05 '22 05:11

GS - Apologise to Monica