Type class
In computer science, a type class is a type system construct that supports ad hoc polymorphism. This is achieved by adding constraints to type variables in parametrically polymorphic types. Such a constraint typically involves a type class
T
and a type variable a
, and means that a
can only be instantiated to a type whose members support the overloaded operations associated with T
.Type classes were first implemented in the Haskell programming language after first being proposed by Philip Wadler and Stephen Blott as an extension to "eqtypes" in Standard ML, and were originally conceived as a way of implementing overloaded arithmetic and equality operators in a principled fashion.
In contrast with the "eqtypes" of Standard ML, overloading the equality operator through the use of type classes in Haskell does not require extensive modification of the compiler frontend or the underlying type system.
Since their creation, many other applications of type classes have been discovered.
Overview
Type classes are defined by specifying a set of function or constant names, together with their respective types, that must exist for every type that belongs to the class. In Haskell, types can be parameterized; a type classEq
intended to contain types that admit equality would be declared in the following way:class Eq a where
:: a -> a -> Bool
:: a -> a -> Bool
where
a
is one instance of the type class Eq
, and a
defines the function signatures for 2 functions, which each take 2 arguments of type a
and return a boolean.The type variable
a
has kind , meaning that the kind of Eq
isEq :: Type -> Constraint
The declaration may be read as stating a "type
a
belongs to type class Eq
if there are functions named
, and
, of the appropriate types, defined on it." A programmer could then define a function elem
in the following way:elem :: Eq a => a -> -> Bool
elem y = False
elem y = || elem y xs
The function
elem
has the type a -> -> Bool
with the context Eq a
, which constrains the types which a
can range over to those a
which belong to the Eq
type class. A programmer can make any type
t
a member of a given type class C
by using an instance declaration that defines implementations of all of C
's methods for the particular type t
. For instance, if a programmer defines a new data type t
, they may then make this new type an instance of Eq
by providing an equality function over values of type t
in whatever way they see fit. Once they have done this, they may use the function elem
on
, that is, lists of elements of type t
.Note that type classes are different from classes in object-oriented programming languages. In particular,
Eq
is not a type: there is no such thing as a value of type Eq
.Type classes are closely related to parametric polymorphism. For example, note that the type of
elem
as specified above would be the parametrically polymorphic type a -> -> Bool
were it not for the type class constraint "Eq a =>
".Higher-kinded polymorphism
A type class need not take a type variable of kindType
but can take one of any kind. These type classes with higher kinds are sometimes called constructor classes. An example is the Monad
class:class Monad m where
return :: a -> m a
:: m a -> -> m b
The fact that m is applied to a type variable indicates that it has kind
Type -> Type
, i.e. it takes a type and returns a type, the kind of Monad
is thus:Monad :: -> Constraint
Multi-parameter type classes
Type classes permit multiple type parameters, and so type classes can be seen as relations on types. For example, in the GHC standard library, the classIArray
expresses a general immutable array interface. In this class, the type class constraint IArray a e
means that a
is an array type that contains elements of type e
. Like multimethods, multi-parameter type classes support calling different implementations of a method depending on the types of multiple arguments, and indeed return types. Multi-parameter type classes do not require searching for the method to call on every call at runtime; rather the method to call is first compiled and stored in the dictionary of the type class instance, just as with single-parameter type classes.
Haskell code that uses multi-parameter type classes is not portable, as this feature is not part of the Haskell 98 standard. The popular Haskell implementations, GHC and Hugs, support multi-parameter type classes.
Functional dependencies
In Haskell, type classes have been refined to allow the programmer to declare functional dependencies between type parameters—a concept inspired from relational database theory. That is, the programmer can assert that a given assignment of some subset of the type parameters uniquely determines the remaining type parameters. For example, a general monadsm
which carry a state parameter of type s
satisfy the type class constraint Monad.State s m
. In this constraint, there is a functional dependency m -> s
. This means that for a given monad m
of type class Monad.State
, the state type accessible from m
is uniquely determined. This aids the compiler in type inference, as well as aiding the programmer in type-directed programming.Simon Peyton-Jones has objected to the introduction of functional dependencies in Haskell on grounds of complexity.
Type classes and implicit parameters
Type classes and implicit parameters are very similar in nature, although not quite the same. A polymorphic function with a type class constraint such as:can be intuitively treated as a function that implicitly accepts an instance of
Num
:The instance
Num_ a
is essentially a record that contains the instance definition of Num a
. However, there is a crucial difference: implicit parameters are more flexible – you can pass different instances of
Num Int
. In contrast, type classes enforce the so-called coherence property, which requires that there should only be one unique choice of instance for any given type. The coherence property makes type classes somewhat antimodular, which is why orphan instances are strongly discouraged. On the other hand, coherence adds an additional level of safety to the language, providing the programmer a guarantee that two disjoint parts of the same code will share the same instance.As an example, an ordered set requires a total ordering on the elements in order to function. This can be evidenced by a constraint
Ord a
, which defines a comparison operator on the elements. However, there can be numerous ways to impose a total order. Since set algorithms are generally intolerant of changes in the ordering once a set has been constructed, passing an incompatible instance of Ord a
to functions that operate on the set may lead to incorrect results. Thus, enforcing coherence of Ord a
in this particular scenario is crucial.Instances in Scala type classes are just ordinary values in the language, rather than a completely separate kind of entity. While these instances are by default supplied by finding appropriate instances in scope to be used as the implicit actual parameters for explicitly-declared implicit formal parameters, the fact that they are ordinary values means that they can be supplied explicitly, to resolve ambiguity. As a result, Scala type classes do not satisfy the coherence property and are effectively a syntactic sugar for implicit parameters.
This is an example taken from the Cats documentation:
// A type class to provide textual representation
trait Show
// A polymorphic function that works only when there is an implicit
// instance of Show available
def log = println
// An instance for String
implicit val stringShow = new Show
// The parameter stringShow was inserted by the compiler.
scala> log
a string
Coq also supports type classes by inferring the appropriate instances. Recent versions of Agda 2 also provide a similar feature, called "instance arguments".
Other approaches to operator overloading
In Standard ML, the mechanism of "equality types" corresponds roughly to Haskell's built-in type classEq
, but all equality operators are derived automatically by the compiler. The programmer's control of the process is limited to designating which type components in a structure are equality types and which type variables in a polymorphic type range over equality types.SML's and OCaml's modules and functors can play a role similar to that of Haskell's type classes, the principal difference being the role of type inference, which makes type classes suitable for ad hoc polymorphism.
The object oriented subset of OCaml is yet another approach which is somewhat comparable to the one of type classes.
Related notions
An analogous notion for overloaded data is that of type family.In Clean typeclasses are similar to Haskell, but have a slightly different syntax.
Rust supports traits, which are a limited form of type classes with coherence.
Mercury has typeclasses, although they are not exactly the same as in Haskell.
In Scala, type classes are a programming idiom which can be implemented with existing language features such as implicit parameters, not a separate language feature per se. Because of the way they are implemented in Scala, it is possible to explicitly specify which type class instance to use for a type at a particular place in the code, in case of ambiguity. However, this is not necessarily a benefit as ambiguous type class instances can be error-prone.
The proof assistant Coq has also supported type classes in recent versions. Unlike in ordinary programming languages, in Coq, any laws of a type class that are stated within the type class definition, must be mathematically proved of each type class instance before using them.