144

Let's say I have the following record ADT:

data Foo = Bar { a :: Integer, b :: String, c :: String }

I want a function that takes a record and returns a record (of the same type) where all but one of the fields have identical values to the one passed as argument, like so:

walkDuck x = Bar { a = a x, b = b x, c = lemonadeStand (a x) (b x) }

The above works, but for a record with more fields (say 10), creating a such function would entail a lot of typing that I feel is quite unnecessary.

Are there any less tedious ways of doing the same?

1
  • 4
    Record syntax for updating exists, but quickly gets cumbersome. Take a look at lenses instead. Feb 19, 2013 at 13:15

3 Answers 3

191

Yes, there's a nice way of updating record fields. In GHCi you can do --

> data Foo = Foo { a :: Int, b :: Int, c :: String }  -- define a Foo
> let foo = Foo { a = 1, b = 2, c = "Hello" }         -- create a Foo
> let updateFoo x = x { c = "Goodbye" }               -- function to update Foos
> updateFoo foo                                       -- update the Foo
Foo {a = 1, b = 2, c = "Goodbye" }
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  • 12
    The RecordWildCards extension can be nice as well, to “unpack” fields in a scope. For updates it’s not quite as nice though: incrementA x@Foo{..} = x { a = succ a }
    – Jon Purdy
    Feb 19, 2013 at 14:14
  • 2
    BTW, in Frege (a Haskell for the JVM) you would define the function as updateFoo x = x.{ c = "Goodbye" } (note the . operator).
    – 0dB
    Feb 6, 2016 at 14:34
  • Nice video by the way youtube.com/watch?v=YScIPA8RbVE Nov 11, 2019 at 23:23
  • Thanks. Sadly been a long time since I wrote any Haskell! Nov 12, 2019 at 9:25
40

This is a good job for lenses:

data Foo = Foo { a :: Int, b :: Int , c :: String }

test = Foo 1 2 "Hello"

Then:

setL c "Goodbye" test

would update field 'c' of 'test' to your string.

7
  • 5
    And lenses-like packages often define operators in addition to functions for getting and setting fields. For example, test $ c .~ "Goodbye" is how lens would do it iirc. I'm not saying this is intutitive, but once you know the operators then I expect it would come as easily as $. Feb 19, 2013 at 15:06
  • 3
    Do you know where setL has gone? I'm importing Control.Lens, but ghc is reporting that setL is undefined.
    – dbanas
    Aug 14, 2017 at 13:12
  • 1
    use set instead of setL
    – Subhod I
    Mar 8, 2019 at 8:12
  • That is awful procedual thinking. in Haskell, don’t say what it does, but what it is. That’s kinda the point of functional programming. Writing test { c = "Goodbye" } is a much more natural way of saying “test, but with c being "Goodbye"”. Whoever designed that setL function, missed the whole point of functional programming. … If record syntax has flaws, which it does, record syntax itself needs a fix. Not something that effectively turns Haskell into a C-like again.
    – anon
    Feb 23, 2022 at 0:06
  • @Evi1M4chine did you have a look how lenses work under the hood? It looks imperative on the surface but it's absolutely wild category-theory-type-magic-trickery at it's finest. Check out: fpcomplete.com/haskell/tutorial/lens Jul 5, 2022 at 20:20
27

You don’t need to define auxiliary functions or employ lenses. Standard Haskell has already what you need. Let’s take the example by Don Stewart:

data Foo = Foo { a :: Int, b :: Int , c :: String }

test = Foo 1 2 "Hello"

Then you can just say test { c = "Goodbye" } to get an updated record.

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