On Sun, Mar 25, 2012 at 5:01 AM, TP <paratribulati...@free.fr> wrote:
> Hello, > > My primary problem may be reduced to adding elements of two lists: > [1,2,3] + [4,5,6] = [5,7,9] > > My first idea was to declare a list of Int as an instance of Num, and > define (+) > in the correct way. > However, it seems it is not possible to do that: > > ------------------- > instance Num [Int] where > l1 + l2 = .... > ------------------- > > Why? > It seems it is necessary to do: > > ------------------ > newtype ListOfInt = ListOfInt { getList :: [Int] } > deriving (Show, Eq) > > instance Num ListOfInt where > l1 + l2 = ... > ------------------- > > Am I correct? Is it the best way to do that? > > Now, what is the most usual way to implement l1+l2? > I have just read about applicative functors, with which I can do: > > ------------------- > import Control.Applicative > let l1 = [1,2,3] > let l2 = [4,5,6] > print $ getZipList $ (+) <$> ZipList l1 <*> ZipList l2 > [5,7,9] > ------------------- > > Is it the correct way to do that? > I have tried: > > ------------------- > instance Num ListOfInt where > l1 + l2 = ListOfInt $ getZipList $ (+) <$> ZipList (getList l1) <*> > ZipList (getList l2) > ------------------- > > Isn't it too much complicated? > > Thanks > > TP > > _______________________________________________ > Haskell-Cafe mailing list > Haskell-Cafe@haskell.org > http://www.haskell.org/mailman/listinfo/haskell-cafe > As Michael suggests using zipWith (+) is the simplest solution. If you really want to be able to write [1,2,3] + [4,5,6], you can define the instnace as instance (Num a) => Num [a] where xs + ys = zipWith (+) xs ys You'll also likely want to give definitions for the other functions ((*), abs, signum, etc.) as well.
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