12

If I create a module AModule with a typeclass Foo,

module AModule where
class Foo a where
   bar :: a

and in another module BModule import AModule qualified and try to make some type an instance of Foo, i.e.

module B where
import qualified AModule as A
instance A.Foo Int where
   A.bar = 0

GHC tells me "Qualified name in binding position: A.bar".

From what I understand, this is related to GHC ticket 3197, which is labeled as fixed. I'm running GHC 6.12.1 and am still getting the error. Am I just misunderstanding something here?

1 Answer 1

18

You don't need the A. inside the instance declaration (See Haskell 98 report §4.3.2).

The following compiles on 6.12.3:

instance A.Foo Int where    -- # A. here
   bar = 0                  -- # no A. here

main = print (A.bar :: Int) -- # A. here
1
  • Ah, of course. I misread a "not in scope" caused by a different line to think I needed the A.. Thanks a bunch!
    – gspr
    Oct 25, 2010 at 11:18

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