Show -is:module

Conversion of values to readable Strings. Derived instances of Show have the following properties, which are compatible with derived instances of Read:
  • The result of show is a syntactically correct Haskell expression containing only constants, given the fixity declarations in force at the point where the type is declared. It contains only the constructor names defined in the data type, parentheses, and spaces. When labelled constructor fields are used, braces, commas, field names, and equal signs are also used.
  • If the constructor is defined to be an infix operator, then showsPrec will produce infix applications of the constructor.
  • the representation will be enclosed in parentheses if the precedence of the top-level constructor in x is less than d (associativity is ignored). Thus, if d is 0 then the result is never surrounded in parentheses; if d is 11 it is always surrounded in parentheses, unless it is an atomic expression.
  • If the constructor is defined using record syntax, then show will produce the record-syntax form, with the fields given in the same order as the original declaration.
For example, given the declarations
infixr 5 :^:
data Tree a =  Leaf a  |  Tree a :^: Tree a
the derived instance of Show is equivalent to
instance (Show a) => Show (Tree a) where

showsPrec d (Leaf m) = showParen (d > app_prec) $
showString "Leaf " . showsPrec (app_prec+1) m
where app_prec = 10

showsPrec d (u :^: v) = showParen (d > up_prec) $
showsPrec (up_prec+1) u .
showString " :^: "      .
showsPrec (up_prec+1) v
where up_prec = 5
Note that right-associativity of :^: is ignored. For example,
  • show (Leaf 1 :^: Leaf 2 :^: Leaf 3) produces the string "Leaf 1 :^: (Leaf 2 :^: Leaf 3)".
Conversion of values to readable Strings. Derived instances of Show have the following properties, which are compatible with derived instances of Read:
  • The result of show is a syntactically correct Haskell expression containing only constants, given the fixity declarations in force at the point where the type is declared. It contains only the constructor names defined in the data type, parentheses, and spaces. When labelled constructor fields are used, braces, commas, field names, and equal signs are also used.
  • If the constructor is defined to be an infix operator, then showsPrec will produce infix applications of the constructor.
  • the representation will be enclosed in parentheses if the precedence of the top-level constructor in x is less than d (associativity is ignored). Thus, if d is 0 then the result is never surrounded in parentheses; if d is 11 it is always surrounded in parentheses, unless it is an atomic expression.
  • If the constructor is defined using record syntax, then show will produce the record-syntax form, with the fields given in the same order as the original declaration.
For example, given the declarations
infixr 5 :^:
data Tree a =  Leaf a  |  Tree a :^: Tree a
the derived instance of Show is equivalent to
instance (Show a) => Show (Tree a) where

showsPrec d (Leaf m) = showParen (d > app_prec) $
showString "Leaf " . showsPrec (app_prec+1) m
where app_prec = 10

showsPrec d (u :^: v) = showParen (d > up_prec) $
showsPrec (up_prec+1) u .
showString " :^: "      .
showsPrec (up_prec+1) v
where up_prec = 5
Note that right-associativity of :^: is ignored. For example,
  • show (Leaf 1 :^: Leaf 2 :^: Leaf 3) produces the string "Leaf 1 :^: (Leaf 2 :^: Leaf 3)".
A specialised variant of showsPrec, using precedence context zero, and returning an ordinary String.
Convert Showable values to Strings
Generalized version of show. Unlike show this function is polymorphic in its result type. This makes it more convenient to work with data types like Text or ByteString. However, if you pass the result of show to a function that expects polymorphic argument, this can break type inference, so use -XTypeApplications to specify the textual type explicitly.
>>> show (42 :: Int)
"42"

>>> show (42 :: Double)
"42.0"

>>> print (show @Text True)
"True"
Generalize the Show method t return any StringLike.
Generalized version of show.
Use the Show class to create a String. Note that this is not efficient, since an intermediate [Char] is going to be created before turning into a real String.
Parse the output of the show function applied to String or Text into what was used for its input.
GET /:id
Not on Stackage, so not searched. 'Show' instances for Lambdabot
The shows functions return a function that prepends the output String to an existing String. This allows constant-time concatenation of results using function composition.
Pretty print the type. ShowType :: k -> ErrorMessage