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I am trying to define a function which would take a Double -> Double function and return its mathematical derivative. I have tried doing the following:

der :: (Double -> Double) -> (Double -> Double)
der f
    | f == exp = exp
    | otherwise = undefined

but Haskell does not support == on Double -> Double values. Is what I am trying to do impossible in Haskell?

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  • You could do it numerically using, f'(x) = (f(x + dx) - f(x))/dx or automatic differentiation. What you trying to do is impossible in the general case for Turing-Complete languages. Apr 10, 2012 at 10:07

2 Answers 2

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Yes, what you are trying to do is impossible in Haskell, and in general: deciding whether two functions are equal for all possible inputs (without just checking every input value, if that is even possible) is equivalent to solving the Halting problem.

However, in your specific case, you can get around it, using a custom type that simulates a Double (i.e. has the same instances, and so can be used in place of it) but instead of evaluating to a number, it constructs an abstract representation of the operations the functions does. Expr represents the right-hand side of a mathematical function definition f(x) = ....

data Expr = X | Const Double |
            Add Expr Expr | Mult Expr Expr |
            Negate Expr | Inverse Expr |
            Exp Expr | Log Expr | Sin Expr | ...
       deriving (Show, Eq)

instance Num Expr where
    (+) = Add
    (*) = Mult
    ...
instance Fractional Expr where
    recip = Inverse
    ...
instance Floating Expr where
    pi = Const pi
    exp = Exp
    log = Log
    sin = Sin
    ...

Then, using rank-2 types, you can define conversion functions that convert between functions that take any Floating and Exprs:

{-# LANGUAGE Rank2Types #-}

fromFunction :: (forall a. Floating a => (a -> a)) -> Expr
fromFunction f = f X

toFunction :: Expr -> (Double -> Double)
toFunction X = \x -> x
toFunction (Const a) = const a
toFunction (Add a b) = \x -> (toFunction a x) + (toFunction b x)
...

You can also define a function diff :: Expr -> Expr that differentiates the expression:

diff X = Const 1
diff (Const _) = Const 0
diff (Add a b) = Add (diff a) (diff b)
diff (Exp a) = Mult (diff a) (Exp a)
...

Having all these parts should mean that you can differentiate (some) functions, e.g.

f x = sin x + cos x * exp x
f' = toFunction . diff . fromFunction $ f

Caveats:

  • this won't work in general,
  • defining a complete Eq instance for Expr is tricky (it is equivalent to the Halting problem, since it is basically asking if two functions are equal),
  • I haven't actually tested any of this code,
  • the differentiation and reconstruction are done at runtime, so the resulting function is highly likely to be very slow.
5
  • 2
    For this to be general you need more than just one X comstructor. And indeed, the Eq instance is tricky. I once tried it, but my equality check failed to finish in overseeable time with expressions more complicated than e.g. ∂/∂x (a+x)/sin x. Mar 28, 2012 at 12:36
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    Depending on what functions you actually add to your Expr data type, it may or may not be equivalent to the halting problem. In some cases, you can normalise your expressions and see if they are equivalent. Or you can make a rewrite system (which is in some ways equivalent to computing normal forms), which can decide if two expressions are equal under evaluation with toFunction.
    – danr
    Mar 28, 2012 at 16:23
  • There are a couple of errors here, so this example won't compile. The type signature for fromFunction :: Floating a => (a -> a) -> Expr seems to be incorrect, and Add Expr Expr should be Plus Expr Expr. May 23, 2019 at 16:25
  • @AndersonGreen nice catches. I believe I've fixed it.
    – huon
    May 23, 2019 at 23:08
  • @huon I tested this example, and it also works when the type signature for fromFunction is omitted. May 23, 2019 at 23:16
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It is in general impossible to test functions for equality, since function equality should be extensional, i.e., two functions are equal if they give the same results for all arguments.

But there are other ways to define derivatives in Haskell that uses different types. For example, Automatic Differentiation, simpler version of AD.

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  • +1 - but details on the other ways to define derivatives would be nice.
    – Don Roby
    Mar 28, 2012 at 11:43
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    It's not numerical differentation, it's very different from that. It's neither numerical, nor symbolic, but the third mysterious alternative. :)
    – augustss
    Mar 28, 2012 at 12:21
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    @quant_dev It might suggest numerical to you, but it's not.
    – augustss
    Mar 28, 2012 at 12:36
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    It can be used to compute numerical values of the derivatives, but it's not done by traditional numerical differentation.
    – augustss
    Mar 28, 2012 at 12:53
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