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I need to serialize a DAWG (provided by this library) to a bytestring. As I saw in the documentation that there is an instance (Ord b, Binary b) => Binary (DAWG a b) which seems to provide support for this, I tried directly to use encode:

import qualified Data.DAWG.Dynamic as Dawg
import qualified Data.Binary as Bin

Bin.encode $ Dawg.fromList [("foo",1),("bar",2)]

But GHC complains that there is no instance for (Bin.Binary (Dawg.DAWG Char b0)). I get the point that it is necessary to tell GHC what data types the graph contains, but then, how is it done? And if I'm wrong, what am I supposed to do instead?

Edit : Stack trace for Bin.encode $ Dawg.fromList [("foo"::String,1::Int),("bar",2)]:

<interactive>:19:1:
    No instance for (Bin.Binary (Dawg.DAWG Char Int))
      arising from a use of `Bin.encode'
    Possible fix:
      add an instance declaration for (Bin.Binary (Dawg.DAWG Char Int))
    In the expression: Bin.encode
    In the expression:
      Bin.encode
      $ Dawg.fromList [("foo" :: String, 1 :: Int), ("bar", 2)]
        In an equation for `it':
        it
          = Bin.encode
            $ Dawg.fromList [("foo" :: String, 1 :: Int), ("bar", 2)]
13
  • Without the complete error I can't be sure, but probably you're being bitten because 1 and 2 are polymorphic. Give one of them a type signature (e.g. :: Int) and see what happens. Jan 19, 2014 at 13:27
  • Have you tried to Bin.encode $ Dawg.fromList [("foo",1::Int),("bar",2::Int)]? I think Binary needs a concrete type in order to automatically serialize numbers. Jan 19, 2014 at 13:28
  • I just tried this, but GHC still complains (though it know recognizes the graph type to be Dawg.DAWG Char Int). Jan 19, 2014 at 13:34
  • It's hard to guess what's going on without seeing the error... Maybe you have OverloadedStrings enabled? What about Bin.encode $ Dawg.fromList [("foo"::String,1::Int),("bar",2)]? Jan 19, 2014 at 13:42
  • 1
    Well, you'd definitely have an instance of binary with a matching hash. The question is whether you also have another one. How many binary packages does ghc-pkg list binary show?
    – kosmikus
    Jan 19, 2014 at 15:16

1 Answer 1

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A problem like this can be caused when two or more versions / instances of the same package are installed.

Package dawg might be compiled against a particular instance of the package binary, let's call it binary-A. It's possible you have a second instance of binary, binary-B installed as well. Now if GHCi decides to import Data.Binary from binary-B, then its Binary class will be considered different from the Binary class that dawg defines an instance for.

The solution is to explicitly select the correct binary instance, for example using the -package-id flag. If you use cabal for your project, then it will automatically try to resolve the dependencies for your project in such a way that consistent versions of all involved packages are selected.

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