Suppose I've got a lot of values of type Word8
, Word16
, and Word32
lying around. I want to widen them, interpreting some as signed and some as unsigned, so that I can store them all in an [Int64]
. I know I can write something like the following function, where the first argument specifies whether we want to interpret the Word8
as signed or not:
convert8 :: Bool -> Word8 -> Int64
convert8 False i = fromIntegral i
convert8 True i = fromIntegral (fromIntegral i :: Int8)
This gives me the result I want:
*Main> convert8 False 128
128
*Main> convert8 True 128
-128
The double fromIntegral
feels inelegant to me, though. Is there some nicer way to say "interpret this Word
as a signed integer and stick it in a bigger Int
"?
convert8 True = negate . fromIntegral
?convert8 True 1 == 1
.convert True
means you want a negative value... such a confusing design! What you want is a negative value IF the boolean isTrue
AND the value would be negative were the word a negative when using a signed type (i.e. out of range for the signed type's positive values)?Data.Binary.Get
gives me values of typeWordN
, and I know (from my format spec) that some of them should be interpreted as signed.