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This repository was archived by the owner on Nov 18, 2023. It is now read-only.
Sometimes one may wish to use different operations for matrix multiplication than the usual ring operations of the Num instance. For instance, one may find the transitive closure of a relation (represented by a boolean matrix) by iterating matrix multiplication with ^(Haskell &&) instead of the algebraic boolean addition. Were a Num instance to be defined with the ^ operation, it would not have a well-behaving negate, so defining such an instance is a poor and dangerous solution. But, due to the absence of parametric matrix multiplication, defining such a broken instance is the only way to obtain the transitive closure using matrix multiplication on Bool.
I propose that we add operations multStdBy and so on, that accept two functions as arguments — one to use as addition, another as multiplication. Note that the ^ operation can be defined in terms of the algebraic operations (as x ^ y = x + y + xy) which can be safely represented by a Num instance for a data type with two members, giving a nice and safe solution for my example.
Sometimes one may wish to use different operations for matrix multiplication than the usual ring operations of the
Numinstance. For instance, one may find the transitive closure of a relation (represented by a boolean matrix) by iterating matrix multiplication with^(Haskell&&) instead of the algebraic boolean addition. Were aNuminstance to be defined with the^operation, it would not have a well-behavingnegate, so defining such an instance is a poor and dangerous solution. But, due to the absence of parametric matrix multiplication, defining such a broken instance is the only way to obtain the transitive closure using matrix multiplication onBool.I propose that we add operations
multStdByand so on, that accept two functions as arguments — one to use as addition, another as multiplication. Note that the^operation can be defined in terms of the algebraic operations (asx ^ y = x + y + xy) which can be safely represented by aNuminstance for a data type with two members, giving a nice and safe solution for my example.