Could it be that (Alternative f, Foldable f) => Monad f?
This should be a counterexample to the right identity monad law.
Below, we exploit the functor product Maybe :*: Maybe
from GHC.Generics
, but it could be inlined, if wished. This is also an applicative, alternative, foldable, and monad. I trust the libraries on these instances to be law-abiding.
We then compare the proposed instance Monad
(the one in the question) to the standard library one. We find that the right identity law is not satisfied for the proposed instance, while it appears to hold (at least in my very limited tests) in the library instance.
{-# LANGUAGE FlexibleInstances, GeneralizedNewtypeDeriving, TypeOperators #-}
{-# OPTIONS -Wall #-}
module NotAMonad where
import Control.Applicative
import GHC.Generics ((:*:)(..))
-- A basic wrapper to avoid overlapping instances, and to be able to
-- define a custom monad instance.
newtype Wrap m a = Wrap { unWrap :: m a }
deriving (Functor, Applicative, Alternative, Foldable, Show)
-- The proposed instance
instance (Applicative f, Alternative f, Foldable f) => Monad (Wrap f) where
(>>=) = flip $ \f -> foldr (<|>) empty . fmap f
-- This is Applicative, Alternative, and Foldable
type T = Maybe :*: Maybe
-- A basic test
test :: Wrap T Int
test = Wrap (Just 3 :*: Just 4) >>= return
-- result:
-- Wrap {unWrap = Just 3 :*: Just 3}
The 4
is now replaced by 3
. I have not tried to explain why, though.
I guess it is caused by Just 3 <|> Just 4 = Just 3
.
Using the library monad instance, instead, everything looks fine:
> (Just 3 :*: Just 4) >>= return
Just 3 :*: Just 4
Alternative
is a bit of a hacky beast. It's essentially the class of monoid constructors: type constructors T
such that for any contained type X
, T X
is a monoid. This doesn't really have a lot to do with functors...monads, and is considerably less mathematically deep. (So, only for mathematical elegance, it would be a bit bad to set Monad
underneath Alternative
.)
Let's write that instance in terms of Monoid
for clarity (this won't actually compile):
instance (Foldable f, (∀ x . Monoid (f x))) => Monad f where
(>>=) = flip $ \f -> foldr mappend empty . fmap f
≡ flip $ \f -> fold . fmap f
≡ flip foldMap
or indeed
(=<<) = foldMap
so, this is definitely not something unknown.
To check the laws, we best look at the Kleisli formulation:
(f <=< g) x = f =<< g x
≡ foldMap f $ g x
i.e.
f <=< g = foldMap f . g
Then the monad laws are
Left identity
f <=< pure ≡ foldMap f . pure =! f
Right identity
pure <=< f ≡ foldMap pure . f =! f
Associativity
(f <=< g) <=< h ≡ foldMap (foldMap f . g) . h =! foldMap f . foldMap g . h ≡ foldMap f . (foldMap g . h) ≡ f <=< (g <=< h)
So in brief, we need
foldMap f . pure =! f =! foldMap pure . f
∀f
foldMap (foldMap f . g) =! foldMap f . foldMap g
∀f
,g
That certainly looks not unreasonable, but I don't see whence you could rigorously conclude it for arbitrary Foldable
+Alternative
instances.
Really, the big problem I see with this instance is that it's not nearly general enough. Most monads are neither Foldable
nor Alternative
. If there was a cover-all definition like the one you propose, it would require OverlappingInstances
to define any instance of your own, and those are generally considered something you shouldn't use without good reason.
I do wonder however if there would be any problems with the following default definition for the bind method:
{-# LANGUAGE DefaultSignatures #-}
class Applicative f => Monad f where
return :: a -> m a
return = pure
(>>=) :: m a -> (a -> m b) -> m b
default (>>=) :: (Foldable m, Monoid m b)
=> m a -> (a -> m b) -> m b
(>>=) = flip foldMap
That would at least allow defining e.g. the list instance simply as
instance Monad []
without needing to write out the methods at all since sure enough, foldMap ≡ concatMap ≡ (=<<)
.