Suppose that I have two data types Foo and Bar. Foo has fields x and y. Bar has fields x and z. I want to be able to write a function that takes either a Foo or a Bar as a parameter, extracts the x value, performs some calculation on it, and then returns a new Foo or Bar with the x value set accordingly.
Here is one approach:
class HasX a where
getX :: a -> Int
setX :: a -> Int -> a
data Foo = Foo Int Int deriving Show
instance HasX Foo where
getX (Foo x _) = x
setX (Foo _ y) val = Foo val y
getY (Foo _ z) = z
setY (Foo x _) val = Foo x val
data Bar = Bar Int Int deriving Show
instance HasX Bar where
getX (Bar x _) = x
setX (Bar _ z) val = Bar val z
getZ (Bar _ z) = z
setZ (Bar x _) val = Bar x val
modifyX :: (HasX a) => a -> a
modifyX hasX = setX hasX $ getX hasX + 5
The problem is that all those getters and setters are painful to write, especially if I replace Foo and Bar with real-world data types that have lots of fields.
Haskell's record syntax gives a much nicer way of defining these records. But, if I try to define the records like this
data Foo = Foo {x :: Int, y :: Int} deriving Show
data Bar = Foo {x :: Int, z :: Int} deriving Show
I'll get an error saying that x is defined multiple times. And, I'm not seeing any way to make these part of a type class so that I can pass them to modifyX.
Is there a nice clean way of solving this problem, or am I stuck with defining my own getters and setters? Put another way, is there a way of connecting the functions created by record syntax up with type classes (both the getters and setters)?
EDIT
Here's the real problem I'm trying to solve. I'm writing a series of related programs that all use System.Console.GetOpt to parse their command-line options. There will be a lot of command-line options that are common across these programs, but some of the programs may have extra options. I'd like each program to be able to define a record containing all of its option values. I then start with a default record value that is then transformed through a StateT monad and GetOpt to get a final record reflecting the command-line arguments. For a single program, this approach works really well, but I'm trying to find a way to re-use code across all of the programs.
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