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Template Haskell

Nowadays, Template Haskell has become a topic of great importance in today's society. More and more people are interested in learning more about Template Haskell and its implications in different areas of life. From politics to technology to popular culture, Template Haskell has proven to have a significant impact on our lives. In this article we will explore different aspects of Template Haskell, analyzing its origin, evolution and its influence today. Additionally, we will take a closer look at how Template Haskell has shaped and continues to shape the world around us. Join us on this journey of discovery about Template Haskell!

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Template Haskell (Template Meta-Haskell for early versions) is an experimental language extension to the functional programming language Haskell, implemented in the Glasgow Haskell Compiler (GHC) version 6 and later.[1]

It allows compile time metaprogramming and generative programming by means of manipulating abstract syntax trees and 'splicing' results back into a program. The abstract syntax is represented using ordinary Haskell data types and the manipulations are performed using ordinary Haskell functions.

'Quasi-quote' brackets are used to get the abstract syntax tree for the enclosed expression and 'splice' brackets $( and ) are used to convert from abstract syntax tree into code.

As of GHC-6.10, Template Haskell provides support for user-defined quasi-quoters, which allows users to write parsers which can generate Haskell code from an arbitrary syntax. This syntax is also enforced at compile time. For example, using a custom quasi-quoter for regular expressions could look like this:

 digitsFollowedByLetters = 

Example

A common idiom is to quasi-quote an expression, perform some transformation on the expression and splice the result back into the program. It could be written as:

 result = $( transform  )

References

  1. ^ Sheard, Tim; Jones, Simon Peyton (3 October 2002). "Template meta-programming for Haskell". Proceedings of the 2002 ACM SIGPLAN workshop on Haskell. Association for Computing Machinery. pp. 1–16. doi:10.1145/581690.581691. ISBN 1581136056. S2CID 6096655.