Instance Arguments

Instance arguments are a special kind of implicit arguments that get solved by a special instance resolution algorithm, rather than by the unification algorithm used for normal implicit arguments. Instance arguments are the Agda equivalent of Haskell type class constraints and can be used for many of the same purposes.

An instance argument will be resolved if its type is a named type (i.e. a data type or record type) or a variable type (i.e. a previously bound variable of type Set ℓ), and a unique instance of the required type can be built from declared instances and the current context.

Usage

Instance arguments are enclosed in double curly braces {{ }}, e.g. {{x : T}}. Alternatively they can be enclosed, with proper spacing, e.g. ⦃ x : T ⦄, in the unicode braces ⦃ ⦄ (U+2983 and U+2984, which can be typed as \{{ and \}} in the Emacs mode).

For instance, given a function _==_

  1. _==_ : {A : Set} {{eqA : Eq A}} A A Bool

for some suitable type Eq, you might define

  1. elem : {A : Set} {{eqA : Eq A}} A List A Bool
  2. elem x (y xs) = x == y || elem x xs
  3. elem x [] = false

Here the instance argument to _==_ is solved by the corresponding argument to elem. Just like ordinary implicit arguments, instance arguments can be given explicitly. The above definition is equivalent to

  1. elem : {A : Set} {{eqA : Eq A}} A List A Bool
  2. elem {{eqA}} x (y xs) = _==_ {{eqA}} x y || elem {{eqA}} x xs
  3. elem x [] = false

A very useful function that exploits this is the function it which lets you apply instance resolution to solve an arbitrary goal:

  1. it : {a} {A : Set a} {{A}} A
  2. it {{x}} = x

As the last example shows, the name of the instance argument can be omitted in the type signature:

  1. _==_ : {A : Set} {{Eq A}} A A Bool

Defining type classes

The type of an instance argument should have the form {Γ} → C vs, where C is a postulated name, a bound variable, or the name of a data or record type, and {Γ} denotes an arbitrary number of implicit or instance arguments (see Dependent instances below for an example where {Γ} is non-empty).

Instances with explicit arguments are also accepted but will not be considered as instances because the value of the explicit arguments cannot be derived automatically. Having such an instance has no effect and thus raises a warning.

Instance arguments whose types end in any other type are currently also accepted but cannot be resolved by instance search, so they must be given by hand. For this reason it is not recommended to use such instance arguments. Doing so will also raise a warning.

Other than that there are no requirements on the type of an instance argument. In particular, there is no special declaration to say that a type is a “type class”. Instead, Haskell-style type classes are usually defined as record types. For instance,

  1. record Monoid {a} (A : Set a) : Set a where
  2. field
  3. mempty : A
  4. _<>_ : A A A

In order to make the fields of the record available as functions taking instance arguments you can use the special module application

  1. open Monoid {{...}} public

This will bring into scope

  1. mempty : {a} {A : Set a} {{Monoid A}} A
  2. _<>_ : {a} {A : Set a} {{Monoid A}} A A A

Superclass dependencies can be implemented using Instance fields.

See Module application and Record modules for details about how the module application is desugared. If defined by hand, mempty would be

  1. mempty : {a} {A : Set a} {{Monoid A}} A
  2. mempty {{mon}} = Monoid.mempty mon

Although record types are a natural fit for Haskell-style type classes, you can use instance arguments with data types to good effect. See the Examples below.

Declaring instances

As seen above, instance arguments in the context are available when solving instance arguments, but you also need to be able to define top-level instances for concrete types. This is done using the instance keyword, which starts a block in which each definition is marked as an instance available for instance resolution. For example, an instance Monoid (List A) can be defined as

  1. instance
  2. ListMonoid : {a} {A : Set a} Monoid (List A)
  3. ListMonoid = record { mempty = []; _<>_ = _++_ }

Or equivalently, using copatterns:

  1. instance
  2. ListMonoid : {a} {A : Set a} Monoid (List A)
  3. mempty {{ListMonoid}} = []
  4. _<>_ {{ListMonoid}} xs ys = xs ++ ys

Top-level instances must target a named type (Monoid in this case), and cannot be declared for types in the context.

You can define local instances in let-expressions in the same way as a top-level instance. For example:

  1. mconcat : {a} {A : Set a} {{Monoid A}} List A A
  2. mconcat [] = mempty
  3. mconcat (x xs) = x <> mconcat xs
  4. sum : List Nat Nat
  5. sum xs =
  6. let instance
  7. NatMonoid : Monoid Nat
  8. NatMonoid = record { mempty = 0; _<>_ = _+_ }
  9. in mconcat xs

Instances can have instance arguments themselves, which will be filled in recursively during instance resolution. For instance,

  1. record Eq {a} (A : Set a) : Set a where
  2. field
  3. _==_ : A A Bool
  4. open Eq {{...}} public
  5. instance
  6. eqList : {a} {A : Set a} {{Eq A}} Eq (List A)
  7. _==_ {{eqList}} [] [] = true
  8. _==_ {{eqList}} (x xs) (y ys) = x == y && xs == ys
  9. _==_ {{eqList}} _ _ = false
  10. eqNat : Eq Nat
  11. _==_ {{eqNat}} = _≡ᵇ_ -- imported from Data.Nat.Base
  12. ex : Bool
  13. ex = (1 2 3 []) == (1 2 []) -- false

Note the two calls to _==_ in the right-hand side of the second clause. The first uses the Eq A instance and the second uses a recursive call to eqList. In the example ex, instance resolution, needing a value of type Eq (List Nat), will try to use the eqList instance and find that it needs an instance argument of type Eq Nat, it will then solve that with eqNat and return the solution eqList {{eqNat}}.

Note

At the moment there is no termination check on instances, so it is possible to construct non-sensical instances like loop : ∀ {a} {A : Set a} → {{Eq A}} → Eq A. To prevent looping in cases like this, the search depth of instance search is limited, and once the maximum depth is reached, a type error will be thrown. You can set the maximum depth using the --instance-search-depth flag.

To restrict an instance to the current module, you can mark it as private. For instance,

  1. record Default (A : Set) : Set where
  2. field default : A
  3. open Default {{...}} public
  4. module M where
  5. private
  6. instance
  7. defaultNat : Default Nat
  8. defaultNat .default = 6
  9. test : Nat
  10. test = default
  11. _ : test 6
  12. _ = refl
  13. open M
  14. instance
  15. defaultNat : Default Nat
  16. defaultNat .default = 42
  17. test : Nat
  18. test = default
  19. _ : test 42
  20. _ = refl

Alternatively, you can enable the --no-qualified-instances flag to make Agda only consider instances from modules that have been opened (see below for more details).

Constructor instances

Although instance arguments are most commonly used for record types, mimicking Haskell-style type classes, they can also be used with data types. In this case you often want the constructors to be instances, which is achieved by declaring them inside an instance block. Constructors can only be declared as instances if all their arguments are implicit or instance arguments. See Instance resolution below for the details.

A simple example of a constructor that can be made an instance is the reflexivity constructor of the equality type:

  1. data __ {a} {A : Set a} (x : A) : A Set a where
  2. instance refl : x x

This allows trivial equality proofs to be inferred by instance resolution, which can make working with functions that have preconditions less of a burden. As an example, here is how one could use this to define a function that takes a natural number and gives back a Fin n (the type of naturals smaller than n):

  1. data Fin : Nat Set where
  2. zero : {n} Fin (suc n)
  3. suc : {n} Fin n Fin (suc n)
  4. mkFin : {n} (m : Nat) {{suc m - n 0}} Fin n
  5. mkFin {zero} m {{}}
  6. mkFin {suc n} zero = zero
  7. mkFin {suc n} (suc m) = suc (mkFin m)
  8. five : Fin 6
  9. five = mkFin 5 -- OK

In the first clause of mkFin we use an absurd pattern to discharge the impossible assumption suc m ≡ 0. See the next section for another example of constructor instances.

Record fields can also be declared instances, with the effect that the corresponding projection function is considered a top-level instance.

Overlapping instances

By default, Agda does not allow overlapping instances. Two instances are defined to overlap if they could both solve the instance goal when given appropriate solutions for their recursive (instance) arguments.

For example, in code below, the instances zero and suc overlap for the goal ex₁, because either one of them can be used to solve the goal when given appropriate arguments, hence instance search fails.

  1. infix 4 __
  2. data __ {A : Set} (x : A) : List A Set where
  3. instance
  4. zero : {xs} x x xs
  5. suc : {y xs} {{x xs}} x y xs
  6. ex : 1 1 2 3 4 []
  7. ex = it -- overlapping instances

Overlapping instances can be enabled via the --overlapping-instances flag. Be aware that enabling this flag might lead to an exponential slowdown in instance resolution and possibly (apparent) looping behaviour.

Qualified instances

By default, Agda considers all instances as candidates, even if they are only in scope under a qualified name. In particular, this means that instances from a module that is import-ed but not open-ed are still considered for instance search. You can use the --no-qualified-instances flag to make Agda instead only consider instances that are in scope under an unqualified name.

As an example, consider the following Agda code:

  1. record MyClass (A : Set) : Set where
  2. field
  3. myFun : A A
  4. open MyClass {{...}}
  5. module Instances where
  6. instance myNatInstance : MyClass Nat
  7. myFun {{myNatInstance}} = suc
  8. -- without --no-qualified-instances
  9. test1 : Nat
  10. test1 = myFun 41

By default, this example is accepted by Agda, but if --no-qualified-instances is enabled you have to open the module Instances first:

  1. -- with --no-qualified-instances
  2. open Instances
  3. test2 : Nat
  4. test2 = myFun 41

This flag can be especially useful if you want to import a module without necessarily using all of the instances that it exports.

Examples

Dependent instances

Consider a variant on the Eq class where the equality function produces a proof in the case the arguments are equal:

  1. record Eq {a} (A : Set a) : Set a where
  2. field
  3. _==_ : (x y : A) Maybe (x y)
  4. open Eq {{...}} public

A simple boolean-valued equality function is problematic for types with dependencies, like the Σ-type

  1. data Σ {a b} (A : Set a) (B : A Set b) : Set (a b) where
  2. _,_ : (x : A) B x Σ A B

since given two pairs x , y and x₁ , y₁, the types of the second components y and y₁ can be completely different and not admit an equality test. Only when x and x₁ are really equal can we hope to compare y and y₁. Having the equality function return a proof means that we are guaranteed that when x and x₁ compare equal, they really are equal, and comparing y and y₁ makes sense.

An Eq instance for Σ can be defined as follows:

  1. instance
  2. eqΣ : {a b} {A : Set a} {B : A Set b} {{Eq A}} {{∀ {x} Eq (B x)}} Eq A B)
  3. _==_ {{eqΣ}} (x , y) (x , y₁) with x == x
  4. _==_ {{eqΣ}} (x , y) (x , y₁) | nothing = nothing
  5. _==_ {{eqΣ}} (x , y) (.x , y₁) | just refl with y == y
  6. _==_ {{eqΣ}} (x , y) (.x , y₁) | just refl | nothing = nothing
  7. _==_ {{eqΣ}} (x , y) (.x , .y) | just refl | just refl = just refl

Note that the instance argument for B states that there should be an Eq instance for B x, for any x : A. The argument x must be implicit, indicating that it needs to be inferred by unification whenever the B instance is used. See Instance resolution below for more details.

Instance resolution

Given a goal that should be solved using instance resolution we proceed in the following four stages:

Verify the goal

First we check that the goal type has the right shape to be solved by instance resolution. It should be of the form {Γ} → C vs, where the target type C is a variable from the context or the name of a data or record type, and {Γ} denotes a telescope of implicit or instance arguments. If this is not the case instance resolution fails with an error message.

Find candidates

In the second stage we compute a set of candidates. Let-bound variables and top-level definitions in scope are candidates if they are defined in an instance block. Lambda-bound variables, i.e. variables bound in lambdas, function types, left-hand sides, or module parameters, are candidates if they are bound as instance arguments using {{ }}. Only candidates of type {Δ} → C us, where C is the target type computed in the previous stage and {Δ} only contains implicit or instance arguments, are considered.

Check the type of the candidates We check for each candidate in turn

whether it can be used to build an instance of the goal type {Γ} → C vs. First we extend the current context by {Γ}. Then, given a candidate c : {Δ} → A we generate fresh metavariables αs : {Δ} for the arguments of c, with ordinary metavariables for implicit arguments, and instance metavariables, solved by a recursive call to instance resolution, for instance arguments.

Next we unify A[Δ := αs] with C vs (and, if -overlapping-instances is enabled, also apply instance resolution to the instance metavariables in αs). In case this results in a definite mismatch between the type of the instance and the type of the goal, the current candidate is discarded, otherwise we return the potential solution λ {Γ} → c αs.

Compute the result From the previous stage we get a list of potential

solutions. If the list is empty we fail with an error saying that no instance for C vs could be found. If there is a single solution or if all of the solutions are equal, we use it to solve the goal. Otherwise we postpone instance resolution until the type of the candidates or the goal type are resolved further.

If there are left-over instance problems at the end of type checking, the corresponding metavariables are printed in the Emacs status buffer together with their types and source location. The candidates that gave rise to potential solutions can be printed with the show constraints command (C-c C-=).