-Wmissing-signatures uses forall even when invalid in source
The -Wmissing-signatures
warning is great to learn about the signatures that things should have, and is especially useful when teaching Haskell to beginners.
Unfortunately, it uses explicit quantification (forall
) even when in the compiled module, this is not valid:
$ echo 'foo x = x' > Foo.hs
$ ghci -Wall Foo.hs
GHCi, version 8.0.1: http://www.haskell.org/ghc/ :? for help
[1 of 1] Compiling Main ( Foo.hs, interpreted )
Foo.hs:1:1: warning: [-Wmissing-signatures]
Top-level binding with no type signature: foo :: forall t. t -> t
Ok, modules loaded: Main.
*Main>
$ echo -e 'foo :: forall t. t -> t\nfoo x = x' > Foo.hs
$ ghci -Wall Foo.hs
GHCi, version 8.0.1: http://www.haskell.org/ghc/ :? for help
[1 of 1] Compiling Main ( Foo.hs, interpreted )
Foo.hs:1:16: error:
Illegal symbol '.' in type
Perhaps you intended to use RankNTypes or a similar language
extension to enable explicit-forall syntax: forall <tvs>. <type>
Failed, modules loaded: none.
The type signature provided by -Wmissing-signatures
should be in a form that is valid in the context of the function that is missing the signature.
Trac metadata
Trac field | Value |
---|---|
Version | 8.0.1 |
Type | Bug |
TypeOfFailure | OtherFailure |
Priority | normal |
Resolution | Unresolved |
Component | Compiler |
Test case | |
Differential revisions | |
BlockedBy | |
Related | |
Blocking | |
CC | |
Operating system | |
Architecture |