1

GHC complains on this code:

{-# LANGUAGE TypeFamilies, MultiParamTypeClasses, ScopedTypeVariables #-}

class Test a b where
    data Data a b
    data Marker a b
    test :: Marker a b -> Bool

work :: (Test a b, Test a2 b2) => Data a b -> Data a2 b2 
work =
    let (m :: Marker a2 b2) = undefined
    in if test m then undefined else undefined

With the message:

You cannot bind scoped type variables `a2', `b2'
  in a pattern binding signature
In the pattern: m :: Marker a2 b2

I don't want to move actual functionality of work function into Test class because test predicate is used in several functions.

2 Answers 2

2

It compiles if you bring the type variables into scope:

work :: forall a b a2 b2. (Test a b, Test a2 b2) => Data a b -> Data a2 b2 
work =
    let (m :: Marker a2 b2) = undefined
    in if test m then undefined else undefined

without the explicit forall, the type variables a2 and b2 in the let-binding are fresh type variables.

2

Use forall a b a2 b2. as a2, b2 in Marker a2 b2 will treated as new. Using forall will bring them into scope:

work :: forall a b a2 b2. (Test a b, Test a2 b2) => Data a b -> Data a2 b2 

More on forall keyword

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