The extensible effects library and the layers library appear to have the same goals (making it easy to compose different effects together). Both talk about the advantages they offer over mtl, but neither makes reference to the other. Can both accomplish the same thing? Does one subsume the other? Does each have some feature that the other lacks?
2 Answers
While I'm in no way experienced with any of those, it's quite straighforward from the articles.
While layers
are rather building upon MTL, exteff
is a wholly different approach. exteff
defines one monad that contains information about its effects in its type. exteff
claims to solve the problem of monad ordering, i.e. if monads A and B are interchangable, the classic approach would make A (B a)
and B (A a)
different types. In exteff
they're the same.
From the interface of layers
it seems that it didn't solve that problem.
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The github page of
extensible-effects
provides describes some problems with the package, from which only one applies to GHC > 7.8, namely:Common functions can't be grouped using typeclasses, e.g. the ask and getState functions can't be grouped with some [...]
(github.com/suhailshergill/extensible-effects). Could you tell more about how it applies to layers package? I think we all would be interested in seeing the problem from different "angles". cc: @ibotty Feb 22, 2015 at 16:33
adding to polkovnikov's answer, extensible-effects
are initially encoded effects and the effects in layers
(and mtl
) are final encoded. both approaches have advantages and disadvantages, and perform better or worse in some scenarios.
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4Can you be more concrete? In what specific scenarios does one or other approach perform better or worse?– lmmSep 23, 2014 at 13:29
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2i guess i won't have time for a long while. the gist is, that with mtl/layers (or more accurately: transformers) you pay whenever you add a new transformer. lifting through
t (t1 (t2 (t3 m)))
is pretty expensive and not neccessary with a free monad-like approach asextensible-effects
is using. but: with just one transformer it is way faster than extensible effects. that's what you can see in the benchmark i linked.– ibottyOct 7, 2014 at 8:33