In this response to another question, a little Haskell code sketch was given which uses wrapper functions to factor out some code for doing syntax checking on command line arguments. Here's the part of the code which I'm trying to simplify:
takesSingleArg :: (String -> IO ()) -> [String] -> IO ()
takesSingleArg act [arg] = act arg
takesSingleArg _ _ = showUsageMessage
takesTwoArgs :: (String -> String -> IO ()) -> [String] -> IO ()
takesTwoArgs act [arg1, arg2] = act arg1 arg2
takesTwoArgs _ _ = showUsageMessage
Is there a way (maybe using Template Haskell?) to avoid having to write extra functions for each number of arguments? Ideally, I'd like to be able to write something like (I'm making this syntax up)
generateArgumentWrapper<2, showUsageMessage>
And that expands to
\fn args -> case args of
[a, b] -> fn a b
_ -> showUsageMessage
Ideally, I could even have a variable number of arguments to the generateArgumentWrapper
meta-function, so that I could do
generateArgumentWrapper<2, asInt, asFilePath, showUsageMessage>
And that expands to
\fn args -> case args of
[a, b] -> fn (asInt a) (asFilePath b)
_ -> showUsageMessage
Is anybody aware of a way to achieve this? It would be a really easy way to bind command line arguments ([String]
) to arbitrary functions. Or is there maybe a totally different, better approach?