On 2009 Apr 9, at 22:30, Jonathan Cast wrote:
On Thu, 2009-04-09 at 21:57 -0400, Brandon S. Allbery KF8NH wrote:
On 2009 Apr 9, at 16:09, Luke Palmer wrote:
On Thu, Apr 9, 2009 at 1:33 PM, Miguel Mitrofanov
<[email protected]> wrote:
               I'm not sure what you mean by that, but semantically
               IO is definitely
               *not* a state monad.  Under any circumstances or any
               set of assumptions.

       Ehm? Why not?

Mainly forkIO.  There may be other reasons.

I thought I had excluded that stuff to simplify the question; the fact
that IO is Haskell's toxic waste dump is more or less irrelevant to
the core concept.

Well, the `core concept' of IO includes the concept of a user who's
watching and interacting with your program as it runs, no?

Yes. That's the opaque "real world"; an I/O operation conceptually modifies this state, which is how things get tied together. Ordinary user programs can't interact with the "real world" sate except via functions defined on IO, which are assumed to modify the state; that's exactly how non-RT actions are modeled via RT code.

Stuff like forkIO and newIORef can also be understood that way, it's just a bit more complex to follow them around.

Please note that ghc *does* implement IO (from Core up, at least) this way, modulo unboxed tuples, so claims that it is "wrong" are dubious at best.
    s <- readFile "/my_file"
    writeFile "/my_file" "Hello, world!\n"
threadDelay 10000 -- If you don't like threadDelay, just substitute forcing
                      -- an expensive thunk here
    writeFile "/my_file" s

As a function from initial state to final state, this program is just
the identity; but surely this program should be considered different

It is?

> -- these implicitly are considered to return a modified RealWorld
> readFile :: RealWorld -> (String,RealWorld)
> writeFile :: RealWorld -> ((),RealWorld)
> threadDelay :: RealWorld -> ((),RealWorld)
>
> main :: RealWorld -> ((),RealWorld)
> main state =
>   case readFile state "/my_file" of
>     (s,state') ->
>        case writeFile state' "/my_file" "Hello, world!\n" of
>          (_,state'') ->
>             case threadDelay state'' 10000 of
>               (_,state'') -> writeFile "/my_file" s   

This is just the State monad, unwrapped. And the differences between this and the actual GHC implementation are the use of unboxed tuples and RealWorld actually being a type that can't be accessed by normal Haskell code.

--
brandon s. allbery [solaris,freebsd,perl,pugs,haskell] [email protected]
system administrator [openafs,heimdal,too many hats] [email protected]
electrical and computer engineering, carnegie mellon university    KF8NH


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