• @[email protected]
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      610 days ago

      Wait, now I need to know why.

      * some time later *

      I went to check why the hell this happened. It looks like the pair (“(,)”) is defined as an instance of Foldable, for some reason, which is the class used by functions like foldl() and foldr(). Meanwhile, triples and other tuples of higher order (such as triples, quadruples, …) are not instances of Foldable.

      The weirdest part is that, if you try to use a pair as a Foldable, you only get the second value, for some reason… Here is an example.

      ghci> foldl (\acc x -> x:acc) [] (1,2)
      
      [2]
      

      This makes it so that the returned length is 1.

      • @[email protected]
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        610 days ago

        Oddly enough, in Haskell (as defined by the report), length is monomorphic, so it just doesn’t work on tuples (type error).

        Due to the way kinds (types of types) work in Haskell, Foldable instances can only operate over (i.e. length only counts) elements of the last/final type argument. So, for (,) it only counts the second part, which is always there exactly once. If you provided a Foldable for (,) it would also have length of 1.

      • Lovable Sidekick
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        10 days ago

        I don’t even know Haskell but it seems like (" ( , ) ") would be an instance of boob.

        • @[email protected]
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          29 days ago

          (.) is a valid expression in Haskell. Normally it is the prefix form of the infix operator . that does function composition. (.) (2*) (1+) 3 = ((2*) . (1+)) 3 = 2 * (1 + 3) = 8.

          But, the most common use of the word “boob” in my experience in Haskell is the “boobs operator”: (.)(.). It’s usage in Haskell is limited (tho valid), but it’s appearance in racy ASCII art predates even the first versions on Haskell.

        • Dr. Moose
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          10 days ago

          It looks like two worms split running from another tinier worm. Makes you wonder what it has done to be so feared