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                        A tiny language, a subset of Haskell aimed at aiding teachers teach Haskell
 Duet
 Duet
A tiny language, a subset of Haskell (with type classes) aimed at aiding teachers teach Haskell
Run
Running code in Duet literally performs one substitution step at
time. For example, evaluating (\x -> x + 5) (2 * 3), we get:
$ duet run demo.hs
(\x -> x + 5) (2 * 3)
(2 * 3) + 5
6 + 5
11
Note that this demonstrates basic argument application and non-strictness.
Docker run
Run with the docker distribution, to easily run on any platform:
$ docker run -it -v $(pwd):/w -w /w chrisdone/duet run foo.hs
(This should work on Linux, OS X or Windows PowerShell.)
The image is about 11MB, so it's quick to download.
Differences from Haskell
See also the next section for a complete example using all the available syntax.
- Duet is non-strict, but is not lazy. There is no sharing and no thunks.
- No moduleorimportmodule system whatsoever.
- No letsyntax, no parameters in definitions e.g.f x = ..you must use a lambda. Representingletin the stepper presents a design challenge not currently met.
- Kinds *are writtenType: e.g.class Functor (f :: Type -> Type).
- Kind inference is not implemented, so if you want a kind other than
Type(aka*in Haskell), you have to put a kind signature on the type variable.
- Indentation is stricter, a case's alts must be at a column larger
than the case.
- Duet does not have seq, but it does have bang patterns in cases.case x of !x -> ..is a perfectly legitimate way to force a value.
- Infix operators are stricter: an infix operator must have spaces
around it. You cannot have more than one operator without
parentheses, therefore operator precedence does not come into play
in Duet (this is intentional). This also permits you to write -5without worrying about where it rests.
- Superclasses are not supported.
- Operator definitions are not supported.
- There is only IntegerandRationalnumber types: they are written as1or1.0.
- Any _or_foomeans "hole" and the interpreter does not touch them, it continues performing rewrites without caring. This is good for teaching.
- There is no standard Prelude. The only defined base types are:- String
- Char
- Integer
- Rational
- Bool
 
- You don't need a Showinstance to inspect values; the interpreter shows them as they are, including lambdas.
View examples/syntax-buffet.hs for an example featuring all the
syntax supported in Duet.
Print built-in types and classes
To print all types (primitive or otherwise), run:
$ duet types
Example output:
data Bool
  = True
  | False
data String
data Integer
data Rational
For classes and the instances of each class:
$ duet classes
Example output:
class Num a where
  plus :: forall a. (a -> a -> a)
  times :: forall a. (a -> a -> a)
instance Num Rational
instance Num Integer
class Neg a where
  negate :: forall a. (a -> a -> a)
  subtract :: forall a. (a -> a -> a)
  abs :: forall a. (a -> a)
instance Neg Rational
instance Neg Integer
class Fractional a where
  divide :: forall a. (a -> a -> a)
  recip :: forall a. (a -> a)
instance Fractional Rational
class Monoid a where
  append :: forall a. (a -> a -> a)
  empty :: forall a. a
instance Monoid String
class Slice a where
  drop :: forall a. (Integer -> a -> a)
  take :: forall a. (Integer -> a -> a)
instance Slice String
String operations
Strings are provided as packed opaque literals. You can unpack them
via the Slice class:
class Slice a where
  drop :: Integer -> a -> a
  take :: Integer -> a -> a
You can append strings using the Monoid class:
class Monoid a where
  append :: a -> a -> a
  empty :: a
The String type is an instance of these classes.
main = append (take 2 (drop 7 "Hello, World!")) "!"
Evaluates strictly because it's a primop:
append (take 2 (drop 7 "Hello, World!")) "!"
append (take 2 "World!") "!"
append "Wo" "!"
"Wo!"
You can use this type and operations to teach parsers.
I/O
Basic terminal input/output is supported.
For example,
$ duet run examples/terminal.hs --hide-steps
Please enter your name:
Chris
Hello, Chris
And with steps:
$ duet run examples/terminal.hs
PutStrLn "Please enter your name: " (GetLine (\line -> PutStrLn (append "Hello, " line) (Pure 0)))
Please enter your name:
GetLine (\line -> PutStrLn (append "Hello, " line) (Pure 0))
Chris
(\line -> PutStrLn (append "Hello, " line) (Pure 0)) "Chris"
PutStrLn (append "Hello, " "Chris") (Pure 0)
Hello, Chris
Pure 0
How does this work? Whenever the following code is seen in the stepper:
PutStrLn "Please enter your name: " <next>
The string is printed to stdout with putStrLn, and the next
expression is stepped next.
Whenever the following code is seen:
GetLine (\line -> <next>)
The stepper runs getLine and feeds the resulting string into the
stepper as:
(\line -> <next>) "The line"
This enables one to write an example program like this:
data Terminal a
 = GetLine (String -> Terminal a)
 | PutStrLn String (Terminal a)
 | Pure a
main =
  PutStrLn
    "Please enter your name: "
    (GetLine (\line -> PutStrLn (append "Hello, " line) (Pure 0)))