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Suppose I am given a source file called MyModule.hs and inside it the module declaration is module My.Module where ... (note: not module MyModule where ...).

I am not permitted to alter this source file or change the directory structure where the file resides.

From reading some docs about importing modules in GHCi, it looks like there are ways to import by file name (e.g. either import or :load), but not any ways to specify a module name that will be searched for in all files of the local directory.

Is there a way to import My.Module in GHCi without doing it by specifying the file's name (only the module name) and without installing it (e.g. not building it with cabal, just quickly tossing it into GHCi by module name)?

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You can't where the name contains a dot, as per the documentation

For each of these directories, it tries appending basename.extension to the directory, and checks whether the file exists. The value of basename is the module name with dots replaced by the directory separator ('/' or '\', depending on the system), and extension is a source extension (hs, lhs)...

The key part being

The value of basename is the module name with dots replaced by the directory separator ('/' or '\', depending on the system)

So your module name of My.Module will be searched for as My/Module.hs. You would need to have a directory structure like

project/
    My/
        Module.hs
    project.cabal

And from the folder project you could run

$ cabal repl
GHCi, version 7.8.3: http://www.haskell.org/ghc/  :? for help
Loading package ghc-prim ... linking ... done.
Loading package integer-gmp ... linking ... done.
Loading package base ... linking ... done.
> import My.Module

You can do this if your file is named MyModule.hs and your module name is MyModule, but it's just a special case of the rule above.

There are good reasons for this, namely that it enforces a structure to simplify your project structure and GHC's search algorithm. If this rule wasn't in place, what would stop me from having

project/
    MyModule1.hs
    MyModule2.hs

where both .hs files had the module declaration My.Module? Which one would be correct to load in GHCi if I ran import My.Module? By specifying what the filename and path is, you immediately know that the module X.Y.Z.W.Q.R.S.T is at the path X/Y/Z/W/Q/R/S/T.hs, no searching required. It reduces a lot of the ambiguity that could occur with looser module name specifications.

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  • In the final example you give, I think the question of which one is the correct module to load is trivial: whichever is found first on the search path or in search order. That's how this is resolved in many other languages. I'm not saying that is a pro or con w.r.t. your answer -- just that I see it as a trivial problem and think allowing people to re-use the same module name if they prefer seems fine to me. Preventing it doesn't really 'protect' you from anything.
    – ely
    Jan 28, 2015 at 14:35
  • Also, the docs about all this suggest that it is perfectly valid & reasonable to do many things in Haskell: define more than one module per file is OK; define one module across more than one file is OK (exactly by re-using the same module name and ensuring no declared names conflict); and naming the module something different than the file name is also OK (you can still import it as a package, or in GHCi with the file name). All these are listed in the docs I linked in my question. So while mapping modules to file paths might be common practice, it's certainly not enforced by the language.
    – ely
    Jan 28, 2015 at 14:38
  • @prpl.mnky.dshwshr If you just use the first one found on the path, what ordering method are you using? Unicode ordering? Ok, so now one of them always gets loaded and the other does not, how do you then load the second module? Also, I know of no language that actually does what you say. In .NET languages you can't, although the filename has nothing to do with the module structure. In Python the filename is exactly the module name, you don't get to declare your module name.
    – bheklilr
    Jan 28, 2015 at 14:40
  • @prpl.mnky.dshwshr The example in the docs you linked to really only applies to the Main module and using the :load command. In fact, that documentation states "Question: How does GHC find the filename which contains module M? Answer: it looks for the file M.hs, or M.lhs. This means that for most modules, the module name must match the filename. If it doesn't, GHCi won't be able to find it." (emphasis mine).
    – bheklilr
    Jan 28, 2015 at 14:41
  • "There is one exception to this general rule: when you load a program with :load, or specify it when you invoke ghci, you can give a filename rather than a module name. This filename is loaded if it exists, and it may contain any module you like. This is particularly convenient if you have several Main modules in the same directory and you can't call them all Main.hs." - The exception is that in GHCi you can use :load on a filename specifically, but this is an implementation feature in GHCi, it is not part of the language of Haskell. The Haskell language specifies a file structure.
    – bheklilr
    Jan 28, 2015 at 14:43

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