32

What is wrong with this function ?

test :: Show s => s
test = "asdasd"

String is an instance of the Show class, so it seems correct.

The error is

src\Main.hs:224:7:
    Couldn't match expected type `s' against inferred type `[Char]'
      `s' is a rigid type variable bound by
          the type signature for `test' at src\Main.hs:223:13
    In the expression: "asdasd"
    In the definition of `test': test = "asdasd"

2 Answers 2

39

test :: Foo a => a means "for any type which is an instance of Foo, test is a value of that type". So in any place where you can use a value of type X where X is an instance Foo, you can use a value of type Foo a => a.

Something like test :: Num a => a; test = 42 works because 42 can be a value of type Int or Integer or Float or anything else that is an instance of Num.

However "asdasd" can't be an Int or anything else that is an instance of Show - it can only ever be a String. As a consequence it does not match the type Show s => s.

4
  • 1
    In GHC with the OverloadedStrings language extension and importing Data.String, you can also use the signature test :: IsString s ⇒ s.
    – Conal
    Jan 8, 2011 at 3:25
  • Is test :: Num => a any different from test :: Num?
    – Lenar Hoyt
    Apr 27, 2013 at 11:01
  • 3
    @mcb That depends on how you define "different". They're both errors, so in that sense they're the same. However you might argue, that they're different because they're presumably the result of different mistakes. That is test :: Num => a could be the result of a simple typo (forgetting the a before the =>), whereas test :: Num is presumably the result of the code's author thinking that Num is a type and not a type class.
    – sepp2k
    Apr 27, 2013 at 11:10
  • any alternatives to such problem or it's fundamentally wrong to tackle the problem this way? here is my case where I have type class IDP and function fromString :: IDP a => String -> Maybe a meaning convert string to known IDP, thereafter I could pass the value downstream like fetchValue :: IDP a => Maybe a -> IO ()
    – Simon
    Mar 2, 2018 at 22:23
8

Yes, String is an instance of Show. But that doesn't allow using a string as an abritary Show value. 1 can be Num a => a because there's an 1 :: Integer, an 1 :: Double, an 1 :: Word16, etc. If "asdasd" could be of type Show a => a, there would be "asdasd" :: Bool, "asdasd" :: String, "asdasd" :: Int, etc. There isn't. Therfore, "asdasd" can't be of type Show a => a. The type of a string constant doesn't get much more general than String.

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