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I have found the definition for and, on the internet but I couldnt find the actual implementation of and. I did search for some sort of prelude haskell file on my computer but it didn't return anything which could be opened in a text editor.

3 Answers 3

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You can use Hoogle to search for Haskell functions, like so:

http://www.haskell.org/hoogle/?hoogle=and

The function links take you to the library module where the function was defined, and in this case the link for and takes us to here:

http://hackage.haskell.org/packages/archive/base/latest/doc/html/Prelude.html#v:and

You then click on the Source link to the right of the function name and it takes you to the source of that function. For the case of and it links us to here:

http://hackage.haskell.org/packages/archive/base/latest/doc/html/src/GHC-List.html#and

and                     :: [Bool] -> Bool
or                      :: [Bool] -> Bool
#ifdef USE_REPORT_PRELUDE
and                     =  foldr (&&) True
or                      =  foldr (||) False
#else
and []          =  True
and (x:xs)      =  x && and xs
or []           =  False
or (x:xs)       =  x || or xs
#endif

You'll see that and actually has two definitions. One is the Standard Prelude definition, which is only enabled if you compile with the USE_REPORT_PRELUDE flag, and the other is the definition the Prelude is usually compiled with, which is typically more optimized.

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    @ChrisTaylor I have no clue. I just assume the people who optimize the base libraries had some good reason to type all those extra characters. Sep 23, 2012 at 16:24
  • 1
    Funny, there is a RULES pragma after that code that essentially tells it to pretend to use the USE_REPORT_PRELUDE version for build/foldr rewriting Sep 23, 2012 at 22:48
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You can't expect to find the source code in your local distribution of Haskell - which is probably Haskell Platform. Instead, go to Hoogle and search for the function. One way, which is what you want, is to search by its name, and, go to its Haddock, and then click "source."

On Hoogle, you can also search by type signature, ie. [Bool] -> Bool which you'll probably find yourself doing quite often.

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Look at http://www.haskell.org/onlinereport/standard-prelude.html

and is defined as foldr (&&) True.

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