What exactly is going on with the following?
> let test = map show
> :t test
test :: [()] -> [String]
> :t (map show)
(map show) :: Show a => [a] -> [String]
I am wondering how I failed to notice this before? I actually encountered the problem with "map fromIntegral" rather than show - my code doesn't compile with the pointfree form, but works fine without eta reduction.
Is there a simple explanation of when eta reduction can change the meaning of Haskell code?
This is the monomorphism restriction, which applies when a binding doesn't take parameters and allows the binding to be shareable when it otherwise wouldn't be due to polymorphism, on the theory that if you don't give it a parameter you want to treat it as something "constant"-ish (hence shared). You can disable it in
ghci
with:set -XNoMonomorphismRestriction
; this is often useful inghci
, where you often intend such expressions to be fully polymorphic. (In a Haskell source file, make the first lineinstead.)