I get an error in ghci when I try to define a new type:
Prelude> data Point = Pt Int Int:1:0: parse error on input `data\' Prelude> let d
titaniumdecoy, I remember being helped with this sort of GHCi mystery when I learned the frequently made point that writing things like 'let square x = x * x' inside the GHCi is like writing let a = f b with do notation in the IO monad -- say in this sort of example:
palindromize :: IO ()
palindromize = do
a <- readFile "foo.txt"
let b = reverse a
putStrLn (a ++ b)
Similarly, when you redefine an expression in the GHCi, it's sort of like doing the following in do notation, which is perfectly legitimate:
makeMess :: IO ()
makeMess = do
a <- readFile "foo.txt"
let b = reverse a
putStrLn (a ++ b)
let b = a
putStrLn (a ++ b)
No one would declare a data type in the middle of such a sequence, but would do it elsewhere in the module. I might have guessed that there was some sort of theoretical objection, but Don S.'s remark suggests there isn't one.