问题
I'm looking for a way to simplify function patterns when the actual data is not required:
data X = A | B String | C Int Int String
myfn :: X -> Int
myfn A = 50
myfn (B _) = 200
myfn (C _ _ _) = 500
Is there a way to make a simpler pattern for matching C, just discarding the values?
hsdev adds a hint "Hint: use record patterns", but Google did not help me there.
回答1:
You can use record patterns like this:
data X = A | B {name :: String} | C {x::Int, y::Int, name::String}
myfn :: X -> Int
myfn A = 50
myfn B{} = 200
myfn C{} = 500
Record patterns allow you to give names to the fields of the constructors. you can also do things like:
myfn C{name=n} = length n
so you can see that you can pattern match only on the specific field you need.
Note: you can use the empty record pattern even with data types that do not use record syntax:
data A = A Int | B Int Int
myfn A{} = 1
myfn B{} = 2
This is fine. There a number of other extensions related to record patterns:
RecordWildCardsallows you to write things likeC{..}which is equivalent to the pattern:C{x=x, y=y, name=name}, i.e. it matches all fields and you now have in scopexwith the value matched for thexfield etc.NamedFieldPunsallows you to writeC{name}to be equivalent toC{name=name}, so thatnameis now in scope and contains the value matched for thenamefield.
Keep in mind that using record patterns doesn't prevent you from using your constructors in a positional way, so you can still write:
myfn (B _) = 200
It only adds functionality.
来源:https://stackoverflow.com/questions/38052553/haskell-record-pattern-matching