Iota is a tiny library for fast coproduct types with a syntax that cleanly supports the disjunction of any number of types.
Traditional coproduct implementations are implemented as binary trees or linked lists at both the type and value level. The syntax for traditional coproducts frequently becomes unwieldy as the number of disjunct types grows.
// a coproduct of types using scala.util.Either
type EitherFoo = Either[Int, Either[String, Double]]
// a coproduct of type constructors using cats.data.EitherK
import cats.data.EitherK
type EitherKBar0[A] = EitherK[List, Seq, A]
type EitherKBar[A] = EitherK[Option, EitherKBar0, A]
// a coproduct of type constructors using scalaz.Coproduct
import scalaz.Coproduct
type CoproductKBar0[A] = Coproduct[List, Seq, A]
type CoproductKBar[A] = Coproduct[Option, CoproductKBar0, A]
Iota coproducts are linked lists at the type level. At the value level, Iota stores the index of the disjunct value's type for quick and constant time access of the values. This syntax scales cleanly to support any number of disjunct types.
// for cats
import iota._
import TList.::
import TListK.:::
// a coproduct of types
type Foo = Cop[Int :: String :: Double :: TNil]
// a coproduct of type constructors
type Bar[A] = CopK[Option ::: List ::: Seq ::: TNilK, A]
// for scalaz
import iotaz._
import TList.::
import TListK.:::
// a coproduct of types
type Foo = Cop[Int :: String :: Double :: TNil]
// a coproduct of type constructors
type Bar[A] = CopK[Option ::: List ::: Seq ::: TNilK, A]
To get started with SBT, simply add the following to your build.sbt file.
For Scala 2.11.x and 2.12.x:
libraryDependencies += "io.frees" %% "iota-core" % "0.3.10" // for cats
libraryDependencies += "io.frees" %% "iotaz-core" % "0.3.10" // for scalaz
Or, if using Scala.js (0.6.x):
libraryDependencies += "io.frees" %%% "iota-core" % "0.3.10" // for cats
libraryDependencies += "io.frees" %%% "iotaz-core" % "0.3.10" // for scalaz
Iota requires either Cats or Scalaz. If you're using Scalaz, use the "iotaz"
modules and import from the iotaz
package (instead of iota
).
Cats friendly terminology (such as "FunctionK") is used in the iota modules while Scalaz friendly terminology (such as "NaturalTransformation") is used in the iotaz modules. If you find an issue or inconsistency, please file a GitHub issue and it will be fixed.
The Cats examples will work against Scalaz, and vise versa, so long as the library specific terminology is adjusted. Expect more Scalaz examples as the Iota library evolves.
See docs/cats.md for the Cats specific documentation and docs/scalaz.md for the Scalaz specific documentation.
If you wish to add your library here please consider a PR to include it in the list below.
47 Degrees offers commercial support for the iota library and associated technologies. To find out more, visit 47 Degrees' Open Source Support.
Iota is designed and developed by 47 Degrees
Copyright (C) 2016-2018 47 Degrees. http://47deg.com