I have a type like this:
data Problem =
ProblemFoo Foo |
ProblemBar Bar |
ProblemBaz Baz
Foo, Bar and Baz all have a lens for their names:
fooName :: Lens' Foo String
barName :: Lens' Bar String
bazName :: Lens' Baz String
Now I'd like to create a lens
problemName :: Lens' Problem String
Clearly I can write this using the lens construction function and a pair of case statements, but is there a better way?
The documentation for outside talks about using a Prism as a kind of first-class pattern, which sounds suggestive, but I can't see how to actually make it happen.
(Edit: added Baz case because my real problem isn't isomorphic with Either.)
Sure, it's very mechanical:
problemName :: Lens' Problem String
problemName f = \case
ProblemFoo foo -> ProblemFoo <$> fooName f foo
ProblemBar bar -> ProblemBar <$> barName f bar
ProblemBaz baz -> ProblemBaz <$> bazName f baz
It should be obvious how to extend this to further constructors, or even how to write a bit of TH for it provided you can think of a way to describe the right sub-lens to pick for each branch -- perhaps using a typeclass for dispatch or similar.
You are right in that you can write it with outside. To begin with, some definitions:
{-# LANGUAGE TemplateHaskell #-}
import Control.Lens
newtype Foo = Foo { _fooName :: String }
deriving (Eq, Ord, Show)
makeLenses ''Foo
newtype Bar = Bar { _barName :: String }
deriving (Eq, Ord, Show)
makeLenses ''Bar
newtype Baz = Baz { _bazName :: String }
deriving (Eq, Ord, Show)
makeLenses ''Baz
data Problem =
ProblemFoo Foo |
ProblemBar Bar |
ProblemBaz Baz
deriving (Eq, Ord, Show)
makePrisms ''Problem
The above is just what you described in your question, except that I'm also making prisms for Problem.
The type of outside (specialised to functions, simple lenses, and simple prisms, for the sake of clarity) is:
outside :: Prism' s a -> Lens' (s -> r) (a -> r)
Given a prism for e.g. a case of a sum type, outside gives you a lens on functions from the sum type which targets the branch of the function that handles the case. Specifying all branches of the function amounts to handling all cases:
problemName :: Problem -> String
problemName = error "Unhandled case in problemName"
& outside _ProblemFoo .~ view fooName
& outside _ProblemBar .~ view barName
& outside _ProblemBaz .~ view bazName
That is rather pretty, except for the need to throw in the error case due to the lack of a sensible default. The total library offers an alternative that improves on that and provides exhaustiveness checking along the way, as long as you are willing to contort your types a bit further:
{-# LANGUAGE TemplateHaskell #-}
{-# LANGUAGE DeriveGeneric #-}
import Control.Lens
import GHC.Generics (Generic)
import Lens.Family.Total
-- etc.
-- This is needed for total's exhaustiveness check.
data Problem_ a b c =
ProblemFoo a |
ProblemBar b |
ProblemBaz c
deriving (Generic, Eq, Ord, Show)
makePrisms ''Problem_
instance (Empty a, Empty b, Empty c) => Empty (Problem_ a b c)
type Problem = Problem_ Foo Bar Baz
problemName :: Problem -> String
problemName = _case
& on _ProblemFoo (view fooName)
& on _ProblemBar (view barName)
& on _ProblemBaz (view bazName)
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