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rakhimov Fix minor source text formatting issues

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Haskell Style Guide
This is a short document describing the preferred coding style for this project. I’ve tried to cover the major areas of formatting and naming. When something isn’t covered by this guide you should stay consistent with the code in the other modules.

Formatting

Line Length
Maximum line length is 80 characters.

Indentation
Tabs are illegal. Use spaces for indenting. Indent your code blocks with 4 spaces. Indent the where keyword two spaces to set it apart from the rest of the code and indent the definitions in a where clause 2 spaces. Some examples:
sayHello :: IO ()
sayHello = do
name <- getLine putStrLn $ greeting name where greeting name = "Hello, " ++ name ++ "!" filter :: (a -> Bool) -> [a] -> [a]
filter _ [] = []
filter p (x:xs)
| p x = x : filter p xs
| otherwise = filter p xs

Blank Lines
One blank line between top-level definitions. No blank lines between type signatures and function definitions. Add one blank line between functions in a type class instance declaration if the function bodies are large. Use your judgement.

Whitespace
Surround binary operators with a single space on either side. Use your better judgement for the insertion of spaces around arithmetic operators but always be consistent about whitespace on either side of a binary operator. Don’t insert a space after a lambda.

Data Declarations
Align the constructors in a data type definition. Example:
data Tree a = Branch !a !(Tree a) !(Tree a)
| Leaf
For long type names the following formatting is also acceptable:
data HttpException
= InvalidStatusCode Int
| MissingContentHeader
Format records as follows:
data Person = Person
{ firstName :: !String — ^ First name
, lastName :: !String — ^ Last name
, age :: !Int — ^ Age
} deriving (Eq, Show)

List Declarations
Align the elements in the list. Example:
exceptions =
[ InvalidStatusCode
, MissingContentHeader
, InternalServerError
]
Optionally, you can skip the first newline. Use your judgement.
directions = [ North
, East
, South
, West
]

Pragmas
Put pragmas immediately following the function they apply to. Example:
id :: a -> a
id x = x
{-# INLINE id #-}
In the case of data type definitions you must put the pragma before the type it applies to. Example:
data Array e = Array
{-# UNPACK #-} !Int
!ByteArray

Hanging Lambdas
You may or may not indent the code following a “hanging” lambda. Use your judgement. Some examples:
bar :: IO ()
bar = forM_ [1, 2, 3] $ \n -> do
putStrLn “Here comes a number!”
print n

foo :: IO ()
foo = alloca 10 $ \a ->
alloca 20 $ \b ->
cFunction a b

Export Lists
Format export lists as follows:
module Data.Set
(
— * The @Set@ type
Set
, empty
, singleton

— * Querying
, member
) where

If-then-else clauses
Generally, guards and pattern matches should be preferred over if-then-else clauses, where possible. Short cases should usually be put on a single line (when line length allows it).
When writing non-monadic code (i.e. when not using do) and guards and pattern matches can’t be used, you can align if-then-else clauses like you would normal expressions:
foo = if …
then …
else …
Otherwise, you should be consistent with the 4-spaces indent rule, and the then and the else keyword should be aligned. Examples:
foo = do
someCode
if condition
then someMoreCode
else someAlternativeCode
foo = bar $ \qux -> if predicate qux
then doSomethingSilly
else someOtherCode
The same rule applies to nested do blocks:
foo = do
instruction <- decodeInstruction skip <- load Memory.skip if skip == 0x0000 then do execute instruction addCycles $ instructionCycles instruction else do store Memory.skip 0x0000 addCycles 1 Case expressions The alternatives in a case expression can be indented using either of the two following styles: foobar = case something of Just j -> foo
Nothing -> bar
or as
foobar = case something of
Just j -> foo
Nothing -> bar
Align the -> arrows when it helps readability.

Imports
Imports should be grouped in the following order:
1. standard library imports
2. related third party imports
3. local application/library specific imports
Put a blank line between each group of imports. The imports in each group should be sorted alphabetically, by module name.
Always use explicit import lists or qualified imports for standard and third party libraries. This makes the code more robust against changes in these libraries. Exception: The Prelude.

Comments

Punctuation
Write proper sentences; start with a capital letter and use proper punctuation.

Top-Level Definitions
Comment every top level function (particularly exported functions), and provide a type signature; use Haddock syntax in the comments. Comment every exported data type. Function example:
— | Send a message on a socket. The socket must be in a connected
— state. Returns the number of bytes sent. Applications are
— responsible for ensuring that all data has been sent.
send :: Socket — ^ Connected socket
-> ByteString — ^ Data to send
-> IO Int — ^ Bytes sent
For functions the documentation should give enough information to apply the function without looking at the function’s definition.
Record example:
— | Bla bla bla.
data Person = Person
{ age :: !Int — ^ Age
, name :: !String — ^ First name
}
For fields that require longer comments format them like so:
data Record = Record
{ — | This is a very very very long comment that is split over
— multiple lines.
field1 :: !Text

— | This is a second very very very long comment that is split
— over multiple lines.
, field2 :: !Int
}

End-of-Line Comments
Separate end-of-line comments from the code using 2 spaces. Align comments for data type definitions. Some examples:
data Parser = Parser
!Int — Current position
!ByteString — Remaining input

foo :: Int -> Int
foo n = salt * 32 + 9
where
salt = 453645243 — Magic hash salt.

Links
Use in-line links economically. You are encouraged to add links for API names. It is not necessary to add links for all API names in a Haddock comment. We therefore recommend adding a link to an API name if:
• The user might actually want to click on it for more information (in your judgment), and

• Only for the first occurrence of each API name in the comment (don’t bother repeating a link)


Naming
Use camel case (e.g. functionName) when naming functions and upper camel case (e.g. DataType) when naming data types.
For readability reasons, don’t capitalize all letters when using an abbreviation. For example, write HttpServer instead of HTTPServer. Exception: Two letter abbreviations, e.g. IO.

Modules
Use singular when naming modules e.g. use Data.Map and Data.ByteString.Internal instead of Data.Maps and Data.ByteString.Internals.

Dealing with laziness
By default, use strict data types and lazy functions.

Data types
Constructor fields should be strict, unless there’s an explicit reason to make them lazy. This avoids many common pitfalls caused by too much laziness and reduces the number of brain cycles the programmer has to spend thinking about evaluation order.
— Good
data Point = Point
{ pointX :: !Double — ^ X coordinate
, pointY :: !Double — ^ Y coordinate
}
— Bad
data Point = Point
{ pointX :: Double — ^ X coordinate
, pointY :: Double — ^ Y coordinate
}
Additionally, unpacking simple fields often improves performance and reduces memory usage:
data Point = Point
{ pointX :: {-# UNPACK #-} !Double — ^ X coordinate
, pointY :: {-# UNPACK #-} !Double — ^ Y coordinate
}
As an alternative to the UNPACK pragma, you can put
{-# OPTIONS_GHC -funbox-strict-fields #-}
at the top of the file. Including this flag in the file itself instead of e.g. in the Cabal file is preferable as the optimization will be applied even if someone compiles the file using other means (i.e. the optimization is attached to the source code it belongs to).
Note that -funbox-strict-fields applies to all strict fields, not just small fields (e.g. Double or Int). If you’re using GHC 7.4 or later you can use NOUNPACK to selectively opt-out for the unpacking enabled by -funbox-strict-fields.

Functions
Have function arguments be lazy unless you explicitly need them to be strict.
The most common case when you need strict function arguments is in recursion with an accumulator:
mysum :: [Int] -> Int
mysum = go 0
where
go !acc [] = acc
go acc (x:xs) = go (acc + x) xs

Misc

Point-free style
Avoid over-using point-free style. For example, this is hard to read:
— Bad:
f = (g .) . h

Warnings
Code should be compilable with -Wall -Werror. There should be no warnings.

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