base-4.8.2.0: Basic libraries

Copyright(c) The University of Glasgow 2001
LicenseBSD-style (see the file libraries/base/LICENSE)
Maintainerlibraries@haskell.org
Stabilityprovisional
Portabilitynon-portable (uses Text.ParserCombinators.ReadP)
Safe HaskellTrustworthy
LanguageHaskell2010

Text.Read

Contents

Description

Converting strings to values.

The Text.Read library is the canonical library to import for Read-class facilities. For GHC only, it offers an extended and much improved Read class, which constitutes a proposed alternative to the Haskell 2010 Read. In particular, writing parsers is easier, and the parsers are much more efficient.

Synopsis

The Read class

class Read a where Source

Parsing of Strings, producing values.

Derived instances of Read make the following assumptions, which derived instances of Show obey:

  • If the constructor is defined to be an infix operator, then the derived Read instance will parse only infix applications of the constructor (not the prefix form).
  • Associativity is not used to reduce the occurrence of parentheses, although precedence may be.
  • If the constructor is defined using record syntax, the derived Read will parse only the record-syntax form, and furthermore, the fields must be given in the same order as the original declaration.
  • The derived Read instance allows arbitrary Haskell whitespace between tokens of the input string. Extra parentheses are also allowed.

For example, given the declarations

infixr 5 :^:
data Tree a =  Leaf a  |  Tree a :^: Tree a

the derived instance of Read in Haskell 2010 is equivalent to

instance (Read a) => Read (Tree a) where

        readsPrec d r =  readParen (d > app_prec)
                         (\r -> [(Leaf m,t) |
                                 ("Leaf",s) <- lex r,
                                 (m,t) <- readsPrec (app_prec+1) s]) r

                      ++ readParen (d > up_prec)
                         (\r -> [(u:^:v,w) |
                                 (u,s) <- readsPrec (up_prec+1) r,
                                 (":^:",t) <- lex s,
                                 (v,w) <- readsPrec (up_prec+1) t]) r

          where app_prec = 10
                up_prec = 5

Note that right-associativity of :^: is unused.

The derived instance in GHC is equivalent to

instance (Read a) => Read (Tree a) where

        readPrec = parens $ (prec app_prec $ do
                                 Ident "Leaf" <- lexP
                                 m <- step readPrec
                                 return (Leaf m))

                     +++ (prec up_prec $ do
                                 u <- step readPrec
                                 Symbol ":^:" <- lexP
                                 v <- step readPrec
                                 return (u :^: v))

          where app_prec = 10
                up_prec = 5

        readListPrec = readListPrecDefault

Minimal complete definition

readsPrec | readPrec

Methods

readsPrec Source

Arguments

:: Int

the operator precedence of the enclosing context (a number from 0 to 11). Function application has precedence 10.

-> ReadS a 

attempts to parse a value from the front of the string, returning a list of (parsed value, remaining string) pairs. If there is no successful parse, the returned list is empty.

Derived instances of Read and Show satisfy the following:

That is, readsPrec parses the string produced by showsPrec, and delivers the value that showsPrec started with.

readList :: ReadS [a] Source

The method readList is provided to allow the programmer to give a specialised way of parsing lists of values. For example, this is used by the predefined Read instance of the Char type, where values of type String should be are expected to use double quotes, rather than square brackets.

readPrec :: ReadPrec a Source

Proposed replacement for readsPrec using new-style parsers (GHC only).

readListPrec :: ReadPrec [a] Source

Proposed replacement for readList using new-style parsers (GHC only). The default definition uses readList. Instances that define readPrec should also define readListPrec as readListPrecDefault.

Instances

Read Bool Source 
Read Char Source 
Read Double Source 
Read Float Source 
Read Int Source 
Read Int8 Source 
Read Int16 Source 
Read Int32 Source 
Read Int64 Source 
Read Integer Source 
Read Ordering Source 
Read Word Source 
Read Word8 Source 
Read Word16 Source 
Read Word32 Source 
Read Word64 Source 
Read () Source 
Read Lexeme Source 
Read GeneralCategory Source 
Read Associativity Source 
Read Fixity Source 
Read Arity Source 
Read Any Source 
Read All Source 
Read CUIntMax Source 
Read CIntMax Source 
Read CUIntPtr Source 
Read CIntPtr Source 
Read CSUSeconds Source 
Read CUSeconds Source 
Read CTime Source 
Read CClock Source 
Read CSigAtomic Source 
Read CWchar Source 
Read CSize Source 
Read CPtrdiff Source 
Read CDouble Source 
Read CFloat Source 
Read CULLong Source 
Read CLLong Source 
Read CULong Source 
Read CLong Source 
Read CUInt Source 
Read CInt Source 
Read CUShort Source 
Read CShort Source 
Read CUChar Source 
Read CSChar Source 
Read CChar Source 
Read IntPtr Source 
Read WordPtr Source 
Read SeekMode Source 
Read NewlineMode Source 
Read Newline Source 
Read BufferMode Source 
Read ExitCode Source 
Read Fd Source 
Read CRLim Source 
Read CTcflag Source 
Read CSpeed Source 
Read CCc Source 
Read CUid Source 
Read CNlink Source 
Read CGid Source 
Read CSsize Source 
Read CPid Source 
Read COff Source 
Read CMode Source 
Read CIno Source 
Read CDev Source 
Read IOMode Source 
Read Version Source 
Read Natural Source 
Read GCStats Source 
Read SomeSymbol Source 
Read SomeNat Source 
Read Void Source

Reading a Void value is always a parse error, considering Void as a data type with no constructors.

Read a => Read [a] Source 
(Integral a, Read a) => Read (Ratio a) Source 
Read (U1 p) Source 
Read p => Read (Par1 p) Source 
Read a => Read (Maybe a) Source 
Read a => Read (Down a) Source 
Read a => Read (Last a) Source 
Read a => Read (First a) Source 
Read a => Read (Product a) Source 
Read a => Read (Sum a) Source 
Read a => Read (Dual a) Source 
Read a => Read (ZipList a) Source 
Read a => Read (Complex a) Source 
HasResolution a => Read (Fixed a) Source 
Read a => Read (Identity a) Source

This instance would be equivalent to the derived instances of the Identity newtype if the runIdentity field were removed

(Read a, Read b) => Read (Either a b) Source 
Read (f p) => Read (Rec1 f p) Source 
(Read a, Read b) => Read (a, b) Source 
Read (Proxy k s) Source 
Read a => Read (Const a b) Source 
Read c => Read (K1 i c p) Source 
(Read (f p), Read (g p)) => Read ((:+:) f g p) Source 
(Read (f p), Read (g p)) => Read ((:*:) f g p) Source 
Read (f (g p)) => Read ((:.:) f g p) Source 
(Read a, Read b, Read c) => Read (a, b, c) Source 
(~) k a b => Read ((:~:) k a b) Source 
Coercible k a b => Read (Coercion k a b) Source 
Read (f a) => Read (Alt k f a) Source 
Read (f p) => Read (M1 i c f p) Source 
(Read a, Read b, Read c, Read d) => Read (a, b, c, d) Source 
(Read a, Read b, Read c, Read d, Read e) => Read (a, b, c, d, e) Source 
(Read a, Read b, Read c, Read d, Read e, Read f) => Read (a, b, c, d, e, f) Source 
(Read a, Read b, Read c, Read d, Read e, Read f, Read g) => Read (a, b, c, d, e, f, g) Source 
(Read a, Read b, Read c, Read d, Read e, Read f, Read g, Read h) => Read (a, b, c, d, e, f, g, h) Source 
(Read a, Read b, Read c, Read d, Read e, Read f, Read g, Read h, Read i) => Read (a, b, c, d, e, f, g, h, i) Source 
(Read a, Read b, Read c, Read d, Read e, Read f, Read g, Read h, Read i, Read j) => Read (a, b, c, d, e, f, g, h, i, j) Source 
(Read a, Read b, Read c, Read d, Read e, Read f, Read g, Read h, Read i, Read j, Read k) => Read (a, b, c, d, e, f, g, h, i, j, k) Source 
(Read a, Read b, Read c, Read d, Read e, Read f, Read g, Read h, Read i, Read j, Read k, Read l) => Read (a, b, c, d, e, f, g, h, i, j, k, l) Source 
(Read a, Read b, Read c, Read d, Read e, Read f, Read g, Read h, Read i, Read j, Read k, Read l, Read m) => Read (a, b, c, d, e, f, g, h, i, j, k, l, m) Source 
(Read a, Read b, Read c, Read d, Read e, Read f, Read g, Read h, Read i, Read j, Read k, Read l, Read m, Read n) => Read (a, b, c, d, e, f, g, h, i, j, k, l, m, n) Source 
(Read a, Read b, Read c, Read d, Read e, Read f, Read g, Read h, Read i, Read j, Read k, Read l, Read m, Read n, Read o) => Read (a, b, c, d, e, f, g, h, i, j, k, l, m, n, o) Source 

type ReadS a = String -> [(a, String)] Source

A parser for a type a, represented as a function that takes a String and returns a list of possible parses as (a,String) pairs.

Note that this kind of backtracking parser is very inefficient; reading a large structure may be quite slow (cf ReadP).

Haskell 2010 functions

reads :: Read a => ReadS a Source

equivalent to readsPrec with a precedence of 0.

read :: Read a => String -> a Source

The read function reads input from a string, which must be completely consumed by the input process.

readParen :: Bool -> ReadS a -> ReadS a Source

readParen True p parses what p parses, but surrounded with parentheses.

readParen False p parses what p parses, but optionally surrounded with parentheses.

lex :: ReadS String Source

The lex function reads a single lexeme from the input, discarding initial white space, and returning the characters that constitute the lexeme. If the input string contains only white space, lex returns a single successful `lexeme' consisting of the empty string. (Thus lex "" = [("","")].) If there is no legal lexeme at the beginning of the input string, lex fails (i.e. returns []).

This lexer is not completely faithful to the Haskell lexical syntax in the following respects:

  • Qualified names are not handled properly
  • Octal and hexadecimal numerics are not recognized as a single token
  • Comments are not treated properly

New parsing functions

data Lexeme Source

Constructors

Char Char

Character literal

String String

String literal, with escapes interpreted

Punc String

Punctuation or reserved symbol, e.g. (, ::

Ident String

Haskell identifier, e.g. foo, Baz

Symbol String

Haskell symbol, e.g. >>, :%

Number Number

Since: 4.6.0.0

EOF 

lexP :: ReadPrec Lexeme Source

Parse a single lexeme

parens :: ReadPrec a -> ReadPrec a Source

(parens p) parses "P", "(P0)", "((P0))", etc, where p parses "P" in the current precedence context and parses "P0" in precedence context zero

readListDefault :: Read a => ReadS [a] Source

A possible replacement definition for the readList method (GHC only). This is only needed for GHC, and even then only for Read instances where readListPrec isn't defined as readListPrecDefault.

readListPrecDefault :: Read a => ReadPrec [a] Source

A possible replacement definition for the readListPrec method, defined using readPrec (GHC only).

readEither :: Read a => String -> Either String a Source

Parse a string using the Read instance. Succeeds if there is exactly one valid result. A Left value indicates a parse error.

Since: 4.6.0.0

readMaybe :: Read a => String -> Maybe a Source

Parse a string using the Read instance. Succeeds if there is exactly one valid result.

Since: 4.6.0.0