I am working on a simple programming language interpreter in Haskell and I have a bit of trouble while defining standard library. I would like it to be defined as a static string at the toplevel and compiled along with my interpreter:
stdLibStr :: String
stdLibStr = "id a := a;;"
parse :: String -> Either Error UntypedModule
typecheck :: UntypedModule -> Either Error TypedModule
-- constexpr
stdLib :: TypedModule
stdLib = either (error . show) id $ parse stdLibStr >>= typecheck
However, model above won't evaluate stdLib
during compilation time. Moreover, it won't give me any feedback on neither parsing nor typechecking error. I would like my interpreter simply not compile if either parse
or typecheck
returns Left
as in the following example:
stdLibString = "≠²³¢©œęæśð"
-- Compilation error: "cannot parse definition"
stdLib = either (error . show) id $ parse stdLibStr >>= typecheck
I was trying to achievie this using fail
while defining QuasiQuotation for my language, but because of some other problems it is not possible to have such a quotation.
How to do it in most convenient way?
Obj
in the first place instead of anEither Err Obj
value?Right
, but how does the compiler know? It sounds like you're looking for dependent types.