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I'm just learning Haskell and still trying to figure out how things work.

So I'm creating a list class that can hold a mixture of Int and Char.

data Algebra = Empty
|   Nmbr Int Algebra
|   Smbl Char Algebra

Then I try to make it an instance of Eq

instance Eq Algebra where
Empty == Empty              = True
(Nmbr x xl) == (Nmbr y yl)  = (x == y) && (xl==yl)
(Smbl x xl) == (Smbl y yl)  = (x == y) && (xl==yl)
_ == _                  = False

and I get an Ambiguous occurrence == compile error. It can't tell the difference between Main.== and Prelude.==. If I manually replace all == with Main.== or Prelude.== then it compiles fine.

I don't see why the compiler is having so much difficulty here. x and y are clearly defined as being Int or Char in each case. I've compared what I am doing to the numerous tutorial examples (eg http://www.haskell.org/tutorial/classes.html) and I can't determine why the compiler is being such a jerk in this situation :P

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1 Answer 1

10

You need to indent the body of your instance definition:

instance Eq Algebra where
  Empty == Empty              = True
  (Nmbr x xl) == (Nmbr y yl)  = (x == y) && (xl==yl)
  (Smbl x xl) == (Smbl y yl)  = (x == y) && (xl==yl)
  _ == _                  = False

Otherwise the compiler sees it as two things:

  • An instance Eq Algebra with an empty body, producing the default definitions of a == b = not (a /= b) and vice versa.

  • A definition of a new infix operator named ==.

Then using == in your code now produces an ambiguity between the == from Eq (defined in Prelude) and the == in your code (Main).

And yes, deriving Eq gives you exactly this kind of structural equality.

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  • Wow! I swear nobody ever explained that indents were a necessary part of Haskell coding. Thank you so much! Jun 23, 2014 at 1:29
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    @StephenDouglasAllen: Indentation in Haskell is syntactic sugar for curly braces and semicolons. Check out the Haskell Report for the exact definition: haskell.org/onlinereport/haskell2010/…
    – Jon Purdy
    Jun 23, 2014 at 1:31
  • Another Question: Are the indents needed for the data statement? I'm assuming not because the | symbols hold it together, right? Jun 23, 2014 at 1:32
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    @StephenDouglasAllen Yeah, they are needed. The data definition you gave doesn't compile for me. Also, by the way, I would suggest using spaces instead of tabs (just in case you're using tabs). It's definitely possible to effectively program in Haskell with tabs, but it can be less intuitive if you're not used to that style. Jun 23, 2014 at 1:52
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    It's definitely possible to program in Haskell with tabs, but using tabs in Haskell code is like using all one-letter variable names in C: it's not required to win an obfuscated programming contest, but it certainly helps.
    – dfeuer
    Jun 23, 2014 at 6:43

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