% % (c) The GRASP/AQUA Project, Glasgow University, 1992-1998 % \section[PrelInfo]{The @PrelInfo@ interface to the compiler's prelude knowledge} \begin{code} {-# LANGUAGE CPP #-} module PrelInfo ( wiredInIds, ghcPrimIds, primOpRules, builtinRules, ghcPrimExports, wiredInThings, basicKnownKeyNames, primOpId, -- Random other things maybeCharLikeCon, maybeIntLikeCon, -- Class categories isNumericClass, isStandardClass ) where #include "HsVersions.h" import PrelNames import PrelRules import Avail import PrimOp import DataCon import Id import MkId import TysPrim import TysWiredIn import HscTypes import Class import TyCon import Util import {-# SOURCE #-} TcTypeNats ( typeNatTyCons ) import Data.Array \end{code} %************************************************************************ %* * \subsection[builtinNameInfo]{Lookup built-in names} %* * %************************************************************************ Notes about wired in things ~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~ * Wired-in things are Ids\/TyCons that are completely known to the compiler. They are global values in GHC, (e.g. listTyCon :: TyCon). * A wired in Name contains the thing itself inside the Name: see Name.wiredInNameTyThing_maybe (E.g. listTyConName contains listTyCon. * The name cache is initialised with (the names of) all wired-in things * The type checker sees if the Name is wired in before looking up the name in the type environment. So the type envt itself contains no wired in things. * MkIface prunes out wired-in things before putting them in an interface file. So interface files never contain wired-in things. \begin{code} wiredInThings :: [TyThing] -- This list is used only to initialise HscMain.knownKeyNames -- to ensure that when you say "Prelude.map" in your source code, you -- get a Name with the correct known key (See Note [Known-key names]) wiredInThings = concat [ -- Wired in TyCons and their implicit Ids tycon_things , concatMap implicitTyThings tycon_things -- Wired in Ids , map AnId wiredInIds -- PrimOps , map (AnId . primOpId) allThePrimOps ] where tycon_things = map ATyCon ([funTyCon] ++ primTyCons ++ wiredInTyCons ++ typeNatTyCons) \end{code} We let a lot of "non-standard" values be visible, so that we can make sense of them in interface pragmas. It's cool, though they all have "non-standard" names, so they won't get past the parser in user code. %************************************************************************ %* * PrimOpIds %* * %************************************************************************ \begin{code} primOpIds :: Array Int Id -- A cache of the PrimOp Ids, indexed by PrimOp tag primOpIds = array (1,maxPrimOpTag) [ (primOpTag op, mkPrimOpId op) | op <- allThePrimOps ] primOpId :: PrimOp -> Id primOpId op = primOpIds ! primOpTag op \end{code} %************************************************************************ %* * \subsection{Export lists for pseudo-modules (GHC.Prim)} %* * %************************************************************************ GHC.Prim "exports" all the primops and primitive types, some wired-in Ids. \begin{code} ghcPrimExports :: [IfaceExport] ghcPrimExports = map (Avail . idName) ghcPrimIds ++ map (Avail . idName . primOpId) allThePrimOps ++ [ AvailTC n [n] [] | tc <- funTyCon : primTyCons, let n = tyConName tc ] \end{code} %************************************************************************ %* * \subsection{Built-in keys} %* * %************************************************************************ ToDo: make it do the ``like'' part properly (as in 0.26 and before). \begin{code} maybeCharLikeCon, maybeIntLikeCon :: DataCon -> Bool maybeCharLikeCon con = con `hasKey` charDataConKey maybeIntLikeCon con = con `hasKey` intDataConKey \end{code} %************************************************************************ %* * \subsection{Class predicates} %* * %************************************************************************ \begin{code} isNumericClass, isStandardClass :: Class -> Bool isNumericClass clas = classKey clas `is_elem` numericClassKeys isStandardClass clas = classKey clas `is_elem` standardClassKeys is_elem :: Eq a => a -> [a] -> Bool is_elem = isIn "is_X_Class" \end{code}