On Thu, Jun 26, 2008 at 06:25:28PM -0700, Ashley Yakeley wrote: > I wrote: >> Proposal: >> Make Applicative (in Control.Applicative) a superclass of Monad (in >> Control.Monad). > > So does the "silence = approval" rule apply here?
I think that people believe this is generally a good idea, but until the actual language that is haskell' is formalized, library issues are on the backburner. But yeah, I think cleaning up various things about the haskell 98 class hierarchy is a good idea. Even if class aliases are not in the standard itself but this change was, implementing class aliasse would allow individual compilers to provide full back and forwards compatability with haskell 98 and haskell'. So, that might be a route to having our cake and eating it too. We can have the benefit of class aliases without having to break the haskell' rules and standardize such an immature extension since they were designed to be 'transparent' to code that doesn't know about them. Haskell 98 code, and conformant haskell' prime code (as in, code that doesn't explicitly mention class aliases) will coexist peacefully and we will get a lot of experience using class aliases for when they eventually perhaps do get standardized. John -- John Meacham - ⑆repetae.net⑆john⑈ _______________________________________________ Haskell-prime mailing list Haskell-prime@haskell.org http://www.haskell.org/mailman/listinfo/haskell-prime