Setting compiler options for intero in emacs - haskell

When I am developing I like to have -fdefer-type-errors and -XPartialTypeSignatures enabled. Currently I just add
{-# LANGUAGE PartialTypeSignatures #-}
{-# OPTIONS_GHC -fdefer-type-errors #-}
to the top of the file I am working with. However this is not ideal as I often forget to remove these lines once I am done. Is there an option to pass these to intero in emacs?

Updating your cabal file to specify the relevant extensions and ghc-options should work, i.e.:
...
lib
hs-source-dirs: src
ghc-options: -fdefer-type-errors
extensions: PartialTypeSignatures

This can now be archived by setting intero-extra-ghc-options and intero-extra-ghci-options.

Related

Is START_FILE a GHC pragma?

Who could provide information regarding START_FILE pragma?
The is no word about START_FILE in GHC Pragmas Documentation. Nevertheless it seems to be widely used [1], [2], [3].
Unfortunately ghc 8.2.2 does not compile following code[1].
{-# START_FILE main.hs #-}
main = readFile "file.txt" >>= putStr
{-# START_FILE file.txt #-}
Hello, world!
No, this is an extension specific to School of Haskell Markdown. It's used to provide several "files" in a single Markdown code block.
It's not "widely used" outside of School of Haskell for that reason. When reading such code snippets, simple treat everything after a START_FILE pragma as if it was in a file with the name indicated as the parameter (if it indicates a format like BASE64 you need to put the decoded bytes into the file instead).
This pragma is used by stack templates. You can specify multiple files inside single file with extension .hsfiles by separating files with {-# START_FILE #-} pragma.
stack new PACKAGE_NAME myfiles.hsfiles will create those files (and all directories automatically) according to your layout, if myfiles.hsfiles contains:
{-# START_FILE {{name}}.cabal #-}
name: {{name}}
version: 0.1.0.0
or
{-# START_FILE package.yaml #-}
name: {{name}}
version: 0.1.0.0
See some examples in this repository:
https://github.com/commercialhaskell/stack-templates

How to enable language extensions / pragmas project wide by default?

Is there a way to put {-# LANGUAGE <feature> #-} pragmas in either the:
<project>.cabal, or
stack.yaml
file, to avoid repeating the same header code in every *.hs file of a project?
As #user2407038 said in the comments, you can use the default-extensions field in your <project>.cabal file.
If you wanted to have OverloadStrings and GADTs in all of your modules in the project, you would list it in relevant section of your cabal file (i.e. if you want it for all of your library files, put it in library).
For example:
-- <project>.cabal
...
library
hs-source-dirs: src
default-extensions: GADTs
, OverloadedStrings
...
If you are using a package.yaml configuration file to generate your <project>.cabal file, you can also specify this field there.
-- package.yaml
library:
source-dirs: src
default-extensions:
- OverloadedStrings
- GADTs
exposed-modules:
- MyModule
...
Wow this is annoying. The error message from cabal literally says to use 'extensions:', but you have to use 'default-extensions:'...

How can I add an extra switch in Leksah?

I would like to add an extra switch "-XDeriveDataTypeable" to the compiler.
Otherwise, I would like to able to compile Typeable.
Where can i do that in Leksah?
Generally
Here's a editor/ide-agnostic solution to your problem:
For language extensions, you can add this at the top of the source as a compiler pragma, which I prefer anyway:
{-# LANGUAGE DeriveDataTypeable #-}
instead of -XDeriveDataTypeable on the command line
You can pass other command line options to GHC, like this:
{-# OPTIONS_GHC -fno-warn-name-shadowing #-}
In Leksah
Leksah uses cabal for build configuration, so there's no special Leksah magic, that's all standard, but you can use the package editor as a GUI to edit the cabal file.
2/3 of the way down is the Extensions section where you can specify what language extensions you want.

GHC -ddump-splices option — Template Haskell

I'm following the Yesod book, which states:
But by using the -ddump-splices GHC option, we can get an immediate
look at the generated code. A much cleaned up version of it is:
How would I do this? I've tried compiling my file with ghc -XTemplateHaskell -ddump-splices Page.hs, which leaves the directory as follows:
Page Page.hi Page.hs Page.hs~ Page.o
None of these files, however, contain the intermediate code generated by Template Haskell.
http://www.yesodweb.com/book/basics
Meanwhile the behaviour changed and the -ddump-to-file flag in addition to the -ddump-splices flag causes the splices to be written to a file, see Section 9.26 of the current (GHC 8.2.1) documentation for more details.
On older versions of GHC (I didn't check in which version exactly the behaviour changed), -ddump-splices worked differently:
The -ddump-splices option causes GHC to dump the splices to stderr. Unfortunately, the -ddump-to-file flag doesn't affect splices (I don't know whether that has deeper reasons or is just an oversight), so you need to capture the stderr output to save the splices for later investigation,
ghc -XTemplateHaskell -ddump-splices Page.hs 2> Page.dump-splices
on sufficiently bash-like shells.
In large projects doing this for all modules is problematic.
Fortunately, you can dump per module.
This also works in ghci.
You can add this line to the top of your module
{-# OPTIONS_GHC -ddump-splices #-}
It dumps it to stderr.
{-# OPTIONS_GHC -ddump-to-file #-}
is also usefull which puts the dump in a file next to the module with the prefix .dump-simpl.
See reference: https://downloads.haskell.org/~ghc/latest/docs/html/users_guide/debugging.html#ghc-flag--ddump-to-file
https://downloads.haskell.org/~ghc/latest/docs/html/users_guide/debugging.html#ghc-flag--ddump-splices
You can add these as separate lines (for easy copy pasting)

start ghci with extensions specified in cabal configuration file

In my cabal file I have a bunch of language extensions enabled. Let's say I have
TemplateHaskell
QuasiQuotes
CPP
Is there a way to start GHCi with these enabled automatically? instead of manually doing
ghci -XTemplateHaskell -XQuasiQuotes -XCPP
Yes, you can use the .ghci file. See section 2.9 in the GHC manual.
~/.ghci
:set -XTemplateHaskell -XQuasiQuotes -XCPP
cabal-ghci was exactly what I wanted.
Specify the extensions in a pragma at the top of the source files:
{-# LANGUAGE TemplateHaskell, QuasiQuotes, CPP #-}
For ghc options that are not within the scope of the language pragma, you can also use the OPTIONS_GHC pragma (and you could write {-# OPTIONS_GHC -XTemplateHaskell -XQuasiQuotes -XCPP #-} (note the lack of commas), but the language pragma is preferred where possible, as it is portable to other compilers that support the extensions).

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