Providence Salumu 24 Days of GHC Extensions: Rank N Types

24 Days of GHC Extensions: Rank N Types

It’s been a while since 24 Days of GHC Extensions looked at an extension that radically altered the landscape of programs we can write. Today, ertes is going to walk us through (extensively!) GHC’s rank n types feature.


Let’s talk about polymorphism today, in particular higher-rank polymorphism using GHC’s RankNTypes extension. This is the one – the type system extension to rule them all.

We will start with a quick recap of what exactly (regular) polymorphism is and how we might interpret it. Then we will find out what higher-rank polymorphism adds and how we can use it to give our programs a boost in expressivity, safety and even efficiency.

So what is polymorphism in the first place? To understand it we should understand concrete (monomorphic) values first. Okay, so what is a concrete value? Here is an example:

intId :: Integer -> Integer
intId x = x

This is a concrete value, a function. When we refer to intId we refer to a certain fully defined value (which is a function) of a certain fully defined type (Integer -> Integer). Note that the function itself is the concrete value we refer to. Here is a second example:

doubleId :: Double -> Double
doubleId x = x

Now these two values are of different types, but their definitions are exactly the same. Can we save some typing and perhaps even get additional safety along the way? Indeed, we can. Like many languages Haskell allows us to provide a single definition to cover the above two cases and also infinitely many more:

id :: a -> a
id x = x

You have probably seen this before. As you can see, the definition is still the same. This kind of polymorphism is called parametric polymorphism, and in other languages you will usually find it under the name generics. One thing to note at this point is that Haskell will only allow this if there is indeed a single definition. In other words you cannot choose the definition of a value based on its type (for now).

It also adds safety through a property called parametricity. If we pretend that there are no infinite loops or exceptions (it’s okay to do that, so we will do it throughout this article), then the function is actually fully determined by its type. In other words, if we see the type a -> a, we know that the corresponding value must be the identity function.

Rank-1 polymorphism

Commonly the above definition is called the identity function. But in fact we should think of it as a whole family of functions. We should really say that id is an identity function for all types a. In other words, for every type T you might come up with, there is an identity function called id, which is of type T -> T. This is the type-checker’s view anyway, and by turning on the RankNTypes extension we can be explicit about that in our code:

{-# LANGUAGE RankNTypes #-}

id :: forall a. a -> a
id x = x

Now it is much clearer that id is really a family of infinitely many functions. It is fair to say that it is an abstract function (as opposed to a concrete one), because its type abstracts over the type variable a. The common and proper mathematical wording is that the type is universally quantified (or often just quantified) over a.

When we apply the identity function to a value of a concrete type, then we instantiate the type variable a to that concrete type:

id (3 :: Integer)

At that application site the type variable a becomes a concrete type, namely Integer. It is valid to apply id with different instantiations of its type variable:

print (id (3 :: Integer),
       id "blah")

Another way to look at this is in terms of promise and demand. You could say that the type signature of the id function promises that the definition works for all types a. When you actually apply the identity function you demand a certain type. This is a useful interpretation when we move to higher-rank polymorphism.

Rank-2 and higher polymorphism

So far we have only enabled the extension to allow us to be more explicit about the “for all” part. This alone is just a syntactic change and adds no new expressivity. However, we can use this new syntax within a type alias:

type IdFunc = forall a. a -> a

Remember that the type fully determines the corresponding function? So any value of type IdFunc must be the identity function. But IdFunc is just a plain old regular type alias, isn’t it? That means of course we can use it in type signatures. For example we could have written:

id :: IdFunc
id x = x

Notice that the type variable is gone entirely. A much more interesting way to use IdFunc is as the domain of a function:

someInt :: IdFunc -> Integer

Isn’t this curious? Since any value of type IdFunc must be the identity function the someInt function is a function that expects the identity function as its argument and returns an integer. Let’s give it some (arbitrary) definition:

someInt id' = id' 3

This is something new that we didn’t have before: someInt has received a function id' about which it knows that it is the fully fledged polymorphic identity function. So it can instantiate its type variable as it likes, and it does so.

The someInt function isn’t even polymorphic! Rather it expects a polymorphic function as its argument. This becomes clear when we expand the type alias:

someInt :: (forall a. a -> a) -> Integer

This function is completely monomorphic. Its type is not quantified. When we apply a polymorphic function like id we get to choose which types to instantiate as. The someInt function does not give us such a choice. In fact it requires us to pass a sufficiently polymorphic function to it such that it can make that choice. When we apply it, we need to give it choice.

If this does not make sense, look at it using the promise/demand interpretation. The identity function makes a promise. It promises to work for all a. When you apply it, you demand a to be a certain type. However, the someInt function makes no such promise. It wants us to pass it a function that makes a promise, such that it gets to demand something from it. We don’t get to demand anything.

This is called rank-2 polymorphism. You can have arbitrary-rank polymorphism by burying the quantifier in more levels of necessary parentheses. Example:

type SomeInt = IdFunc -> Integer

someOtherInt :: SomeInt -> Integer
someOtherInt someInt' =
    someInt' id + someInt' id

This function is rank-3-polymorphic, because the quantifier is in the third level of necessary parentheses:

someOtherInt :: ((forall a. a -> a) -> Integer) -> Integer

Example: random numbers

Suppose that you want to initialise a potentially large and recursive data structure with random values of different types. We will use a very simple one, which is sufficient for demonstration:

import System.Random

data Player =
    Player {
      playerName :: String,
      playerPos  :: (Double, Double)
    }
    deriving (Eq, Ord, Show)

We want to construct a random player. They should get a randomly generated name of a random length and also a random position. One way to do this is to pass around a random number generator explicitly:

randomPlayer :: (RandomGen g) => g -> (Player, g)

But we want to do more. Since the data structure is so huge, we want to print some progress information while we’re generating it. This requires IO of course. Rather than enforcing a certain transformer stack we would just request a sufficiently featureful monad by using effect classes:

import Control.Monad.State

randomPlayer
    :: (MonadIO m, MonadState g m, RandomGen g)
    => m Player

However, the user of randomPlayer may already be using a state monad for something else, or the random number generator may actually live in a mutable variable. You might even run into a case where the random number generator is completely hidden global state, so all you get is monadic actions. At this point things start to become really awkward.

But with higher-rank polymorphism there is actually a very simple solution. The first step is not to request an explicit functional representation of the random-number generator, but rather just some monad m that provides some means of random number generation. Then generating a random number (or really anything else with a Random instance) is a matter of performing a certain m-action. We can write type aliases for these m-actions:

type GenAction m = forall a. (Random a) => m a

type GenActionR m = forall a. (Random a) => (a, a) -> m a

A value of type GenAction m is an m-action that supposedly produces a random element of whatever type we request, as long as there is a Random instance. The GenActionR type represents the ranged variants.

One simple example is the action that generates a random number in a state monad, when the state is a generator:

genRandom :: (RandomGen g) => GenAction (State g)
genRandom = state random

genRandomR :: (RandomGen g) => GenActionR (State g)
genRandomR range = state (randomR range)

If we expand the GenAction alias and simplify (we will learn how to do that later), then the type of genRandom becomes:

genRandom :: (Random a, RandomGen g) => State g a

Now we can write a function that requests such a random number generator as its argument:

randomPlayer :: (MonadIO m) => GenActionR m -> m Player
randomPlayer genR = do
    liftIO (putStrLn "Generating random player...")

    len <- genR (8, 12)
    name <- replicateM len (genR ('a', 'z'))
    x <- genR (-100, 100)
    y <- genR (-100, 100)

    liftIO (putStrLn "Done.")
    return (Player name (x, y))

Notice how the function uses the fact that it receives a polymorphic function as its argument. It instantiates its type variable as various different types, including Int (for len) and Char (for name). If you have some global-state random number generator, then this function is actually surprisingly easy to use. The randomRIO function from System.Random is such a function:

randomRIO :: (Random a) => (a, a) -> IO a

This type signature fits the GenActionR type,

randomRIO :: GenActionR IO

so we can pass it to randomPlayer:

main :: IO ()
main = randomPlayer randomRIO >>= print

Scott encoding

The regular list data type is defined as a sum type. We will write a custom version of it:

data List a
    = Cons a (List a)
    | Nil

There are two ways to deconstruct this type in a principled fashion. The first one is called pattern-matching, which means removing one layer of constructors. You could use the usual case construct to do this, but it is syntactically heavy and does not compose well. That’s why we like to write a function to do it:

uncons :: (a -> List a -> r) -> r -> List a -> r
uncons co ni (Cons x xs) = co x xs
uncons co ni Nil         = ni

This function takes two continuations and a list. The continuations determine what we reduce the list into depending on which constructor is found. Here is a simple example:

listNull :: List a -> Bool
listNull = uncons (\_ _ -> False) True

When we find that the list is a cons, then we know that the list is not empty, so we reduce it to False. When we find that it is the nil, we reduce it to True. The following is a slightly more interesting example, but you will find that it’s really just pattern-matching in a functional style:

listMap :: (a -> b) -> List a -> List b
listMap f =
    uncons (\x xs -> Cons (f x) (listMap f xs))
           Nil

So we have a way to construct lists by using the List constructors, and we have a way to deconstruct lists by unconsing, by using the pattern-matching combinator uncons. However, this is actually an indirection. Interestingly a list is actually fully determined by what happens when you uncons it. That means we can represent a list in terms of its uncons operator, which is called Scott encoding and requires a rank-2 type:

newtype ListS a =
    ListS {
      unconsS :: forall r. (a -> ListS a -> r) -> r -> r
    }

You may have noticed that the list argument is missing from unconsS, but actually it is not. It is implicit, because it is an accessor function,

unconsS :: ListS a -> (forall r. (a -> ListS a -> r) -> r -> r)

which is equivalent to:

unconsS :: ListS a -> (a -> ListS a -> r) -> r -> r

The only difference is that the list argument has jumped to the front. This type is sufficient to represent lists. There is no reference to the earlier defined List type. How do we construct lists of this type? We just need to consider what happens when we pattern-match on such a list. For example unconsing the empty list would cause the nil continuation to be used. This is how we construct the empty list:

nilS :: ListS a
nilS = ListS (\co ni -> ni)

Now when we uncons this list, we give it two continuations. It ignores our cons continuation and just uses the nil continuation. That’s how nilS represents the empty list. The cons constructor is not much different. This time we ignore the nil continuation and apply the cons continuation:

consS :: a -> ListS a -> ListS a
consS x xs = ListS (\co ni -> co x xs)

Let’s write the mapping function for ListS to see it in action. First it is usually much more convenient to have the list argument be the last argument to the uncons function, so let’s write a custom combinator:

unconsS' :: (a -> ListS a -> r) -> r -> ListS a -> r
unconsS' co ni (ListS f) = f co ni

Okay, let’s write the mapping function. In fact this time let’s do it properly. We will write a Functor instance instead of a standalone function:

instance Functor ListS where
    fmap f =
        unconsS' (\x xs -> consS (f x) (fmap f xs))
                 nilS

Compare this definition to listMap above.

You might ask why the ListS type actually requires rank-2 polymorphism. Looking at the operators we have defined so far everything seems to be rank-1. However, we haven’t had a closer look at the ListS constructor itself:

ListS :: (forall r. (a -> ListS a -> r) -> r -> r) -> ListS a

That’s where the rank-2 type is hidden.

Church encoding

We have defined lists in terms of what happens when we uncons them. Alternatively we can define lists in terms of what happens when we fold them completely. This is the second principled way to deconstruct lists. The fold combinator for lists is called the right fold:

foldr :: (a -> r -> r) -> r -> [a] -> r

We know how to construct lists, and we know how to fold them. But again a list is fully determined by its fold, so we can identify it with its fold. This is called Church encoding.

newtype ListC a =
    ListC {
      foldC :: forall r. (a -> r -> r) -> r -> r
    }

Notice the difference? One interesting fact about Church encoding is that the type recursion is gone, so we could use a plain old type alias here. We will prefer the safety of a separate type though, and also we want our Functor instance. Since this is a fold, it is actually easy to write a mapping function:

foldC' :: (a -> r -> r) -> r -> ListC a -> r
foldC' co ni (ListC f) = f co ni

instance Functor ListC where
    fmap f = foldC' (\x xs -> consC (f x) xs) nilC

Notice again how the recursion is gone, not only on the type level, but also on the value level, because the recursion is implicitly encoded in the fold.

Exercise: Write the uncons operator for ListC. If you find this surprisingly difficult, that’s because it is surprisingly difficult. =)

How runST works

Let’s step out of the rabbit hole for a moment and return to the real world. I promise that we will come back soon. =)

The ST type represents a family of monads for embedding a stateful imperative program into a regular pure Haskell program safely. IO allows arbitrary effects, including observable side effects, so you cannot run an IO action from within a pure program. It takes one type argument, the result type. However, the ST type takes two arguments. An ST action might look like this:

writeSTRef :: STRef s a -> a -> ST s ()

What is this extra argument s? To find that out we have to have a look at the big glue between the imperative ST world and the pure Haskell world:

runST :: (forall s. ST s a) -> a

This enforces that the ST action we would like to run satisfies two requirements. The first requirement is that s is fully polymorphic, which is important because of the way IO is implemented in GHC, but that’s just an implementation detail we don’t care about. The main restriction is that a higher rank quantified type will not be allowed to leak out of its scope. Only the result of type a is communicated out of the action, but s is not communicated. This allows the type-checker to enforce that you cannot leak stateful resources out of the ST action. Everything the action does is fully deterministic and repeatable. This will make a lot more sense when we talk about the quantifier law later.

GADTs and continuation passing style

This is your last chance. After this there is no turning back. Either you close the browser tab, wake up in your chair and believe whatever you want to believe; or you read on, you stay in Wonderland, and I show you how deep the rabbit hole goes.

GHC supports type equality constraints, which are enabled when you turn on the TypeFamilies extension:

{-# LANGUAGE TypeFamilies #-}

We are not interested in type families in this article. All we want is those equality constraints, which enable you to write

X ~ Y

in the context of a type. This expresses that we require X and Y to be the same type. Example:

15 :: Int                   -- Okay.
15 :: (Char ~ Char) => Int  -- Okay.
15 :: (Int ~ Int) => Int    -- Okay.
15 :: (Char ~ Int) => Int   -- Type error!

The first expression is obviously well-typed. The second expression is well-typed, because Char is indeed equal to Char, so the constraint is satisfied. The third expression is also well-typed. The fourth one is ill-typed. Since Char is not equal to Int, it results in a type error.

This extension together with higher-rank polymorphism is actually sufficient to encode types that are more general than what you can normally define with algebraic data types. They give us generalised algebraic data types (GADTs) in continuation passing style. Simple example:

{-# LANGUAGE GADTs #-}
{-# LANGUAGE KindSignatures #-}

data Some :: * -> * where
    SomeInt  :: Int -> Some Int
    SomeChar :: Char -> Some Char
    Anything :: a -> Some a

Nothing special here. The magic happens when we pattern-match on values of this type:

import Data.Char

unSome :: Some a -> a
unSome (SomeInt x) = x + 3
unSome (SomeChar c) = toLower c
unSome (Anything x) = x

See what’s going on in the SomeInt and SomeChar cases? The function is fully polymorphic in its type variable, yet somehow we managed to convince the compiler that in the SomeInt case it’s safe to add three to whatever was in the value. This is called type refinement.

The question we’re interested in is: In so many cases it is useful to use Scott or Church encoding or some other form of continuation passing style, but how can we actually do that? Enter type equality constraints:

newtype SomeC a =
    SomeC {
      runSomeC ::
          forall r.
          ((a ~ Int) => Int -> r) ->
          ((a ~ Char) => Char -> r) ->
          (a -> r) ->
          r
    }

This may look a bit scary, but be brave! Again we started with a sum type, this time with three constructors, so again we have three continuations corresponding to each of those constructors. The first continuation corresponds to the SomeInt constructor. Let’s look at it more closely:

(a ~ Int) => Int -> r

This continuation takes an Int. Sure, that’s the argument of the constructor. But it requests a second piece of information. It demands that whenever it is applied, it receives a proof that a is actually equal to Int.

That’s exactly what type refinement is! When the user of a GADT pattern-matches, they want to learn something new about the type arguments of the type. When the user of a Scott-encoded GADT pattern-matches (passes a bunch of continuations), they expect to learn something new as well, and they do by virtue of the type equality constraint.

There we go – GADTs without -XGADTs! =)

Dependent types

Thrilling title, isn’t it? Higher-rank polymorphism is in fact related to dependent types, more specifically the dependent function arrow. We are still in Haskell, so our types cannot depend on values (yet). However, RankNTypes gives us some of the expressivity. In fact I have demonstrated that with a few more extensions Haskell is as expressive as a full dependently typed language.

So which part does higher-rank polymorphism give us? Let’s see how we would express polymorphism in a dependently typed language like Agda:

id : {A : Set}  A  A
id x = x

This syntax says that id is a function of two arguments. The first argument is a type (the type of types is called Set in Agda – it corresponds to the * kind in Haskell). The second argument is the value the function is going to give back. The important thing to note here is that the first argument, a type, is not used on the value level, but it is used on the type level, within the type signature right away. In other words, the dependent function arrow brings the argument itself into scope for the remainder of the type signature. That’s why it can refer to that argument A.

The first argument is passed implicitly (that’s the curly braces). It is inferred from the other arguments, if not explicitly given. Agda optionally allows us to write a quantification sign there:

id :  {A : Set}  A  A
id x = x

Haskell on the other hand allows us to write explicit kind signatures when we enable the KindSignatures extension:

{-# LANGUAGE KindSignatures #-}

id :: forall (a :: *). a -> a
id x = x

Now these two definitions, the Agda and the Haskell one, look almost the same, don’t they? That’s because in fact they are the same. Indeed, forall is the dependent function arrow with the constraint that it can only communicate types and what it communicates is always passed implicitly. So formally in Haskell the identity function is really a function of two arguments, but one of them is always passed implicitly by the type system (and has no run-time representation). This makes it even clearer that the identity function is really a whole family of functions indexed by the type argument.

As a nice bonus Agda allows us to omit the type when it can be inferred from context:

id :  {A}  A  A

And this looks very close to the Haskell version without the kind signature:

id :: forall a. a -> a

With this new insight we can explain more formally why runST is defined the way it is. Here is the equivalent definition in Agda:

runST :  {A}  ( {S}  ST S A)  A

The second (the first explicit) argument is actually a function that receives the type S from runST. However, it has no way to return the type, because S cannot unify in any way with A. That’s impossible, because the scope of A is broader than the scope of S. In other words, the type A is determined before the type S is, so it cannot in any way depend on S.

A useful quantifier law

This is a more formal section, which allows you to manipulate types with quantifiers. It explains some of the transformations we have done earlier. The phrase “for all” sounds a lot like it might actually come from logic, and that is indeed the case. Considering the Curry-Howard correspondence the identity function is not just a handy function. It is also a proof:

id :: forall a. a -> a

The type of id is a proposition, namely: “a proof for a implies a proof for a, for all propositions a”. This sounds true, and it is. The fact that you can write a total value of the given type is a proof of the proposition. Since there is a one-to-one correspondence between types and propositions, we can transfer some of the laws as well. The most important one is the following, which is true for all X and Y:

X -> forall a. Y a = forall a. X -> Y a

If this seems a bit cryptic, don’t worry. It really just means that as long as a quantifier is on the right hand side of a function arrow, we can pull it out and wrap the whole function type with the quantifier. In fact we have already done this:

type GenAction m = forall a. (Random a) => m a

genRandom :: (RandomGen g) => GenAction (State g)

Let’s expand the type alias, which gives us the following scary type:

genRandom :: (RandomGen g) => (forall a. (Random a) => State g a)

Firstly the context arrow (=>) is really just another way to pass implicit arguments via type classes. So for the purpose of applying our transformations we can simply read it like the regular function arrow (->). Now we see that to the right hand side of the outer arrow is a quantified type, so we can apply our rule from above and pull it out of the arrow:

genRandom :: forall a. ((RandomGen g) => ((Random a) => State g a))

I have added some parentheses for the sake of clarity, but they aren’t technically necessary, so we simply remove them now:

genRandom :: forall a. (RandomGen g) => (Random a) => State g a

While Haskell allows it, it is uncommon in everyday code to have two contexts passed separately. Haskell simply merges them, so we can do that as well:

genRandom :: forall a. (Random a, RandomGen g) => State g a

Finally since this is a regular rank-1-polymorphic value, we can omit the quantifier altogether:

genRandom :: (Random a, RandomGen g) => State g a

Conclusion

My experience is that RankNTypes is one of the least appreciated, most confusing and most misunderstood extensions. In fact I myself originally thought that it’s really only there to make ST safe. I was wrong, and very wrong.

Today I believe it is one of the most powerful and versatile extensions. Even this article does not cover half of what you can do with it. The lens library many of us love so much would not nearly be as beautiful without the power of higher-rank polymorphism. =)

I realise that this might be the longest post in this series, but I hope that it was useful and to some of you even eye-opening. Every little step towards my mastery of this seemingly innocent extension felt like an epiphany of its own, so I really wanted to share it.

Thank you for reading and happy holidays! =)

Ertugrul “ertes” Söylemez


This post is part of 24 Days of GHC Extensions - for more posts like this, check out the calendar.

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