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haskell - How to write a monad instance for a pair where both arguments have the same type?

Suppose I have a type Pair:

data Pair a = Pair a a

What is the right way to write a monad instance for it? My idea is roughly this:

instance Semigroup a => Semigroup (Pair a) where
  Pair a1 a2 <> Pair b1 b2 = Pair (a1 <> b1)(a2 <> b2)

instance Monad Pair where
  return = pure
  (Pair a b) >>= f = f a <> f b

Is it correct? If so then where to specify that b-type in the Pair b is a semigroup?

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Actually, the only correct monad instance of Pair is as follows.

instance Monad Pair where
    m >>= f = joinPair (f <$> m)

joinPair :: Pair (Pair a) -> Pair a
joinPair (Pair (Pair x _) (Pair _ y)) = Pair x y

The reason this is the correct monad instance is because Pair is a representable functor.

instance Representable Pair where
    type Rep Pair = Bool

    index (Pair x _) False = x
    index (Pair _ y) True  = y

    tabulate f = Pair (f False) (f True)

Turns out, for every representable functor (>>=) is equivalent to the following bindRep function.

bindRep :: Representable f => f a -> (a -> f b) -> f b
bindRep m f = tabulate (a -> index (f (index m a)) a)

If we specialize the bindRep function to Pair we get the following.

bindRep :: Pair a -> (a -> Pair b) -> Pair b
bindRep (Pair x y) f = tabulate (a -> index (f (index (Pair x y) a)) a)
                     = Pair (index (f x) False) (index (f y) True)
--                          |_________________| |________________|
--                                   |                   |
--                           (1st elem of f x)   (2nd elem of f y)

The following blog post by Adelbert Chang explains it better. Reasoning with representable functors.


Here's another way to prove uniqueness. Consider the left and right identity monad instance laws.

return a >>= k = k a -- left identity law

m >>= return = m     -- right identity law

Now, for the Pair data type return x = Pair x x. Hence, we can specialize these laws.

Pair a a >>= k = k a     -- left identity law

m >>= x -> Pair x x = m -- right identity law

So, what should the definition of >>= be in order to satisfy these two laws?

Pair x y >>= f = Pair (oneOf [x1, x2, y1, y2]) (oneOf [x1, x2, y1, y2])
    where Pair x1 y1 = f x
          Pair x2 y2 = f y

The oneOf function returns one of the elements of the list non-deterministically.

Now, if our >>= function is to satisfy the left identity law then when x = y then x1 = x2 and y1 = y2 and the result must be Pair (oneOf [x1, x2]) (oneOf [y1, y2]).

Similarly, if our >>= function is to satisfy the right identity law then x1 = y1 = x and x2 = y2 = y and the result must be Pair (oneOf [x1, y1]) (oneOf [x2, y2]).

Hence, if you want to satisfy both laws then the only valid result is Pair x1 y2.


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