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haskell - What is the significance of algebraic datatypes with zero constructors?

This passage, which unfortunately lacks references, about the development of ADTs in Haskell, from A History of Haskell: Being Lazy With Class, section 5.1:

In general, an algebraic type specifies a sum of one or more alternatives, where each alternative is a product of zero or more fields. It might have been useful to permit a sum of zero alternatives, which would be a completely empty type, but at the time the value of such a type was not appreciated.

leaves me wondering, how would such an ADT be useful?

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Theoretically: the Curry-Howard isomorphism gives us an interpretation of this type as the "false" proposition. "false" is useful as a proposition on its own; but is also useful for constructing the "not" combinator (as type Not a = a -> False) and other similar constructions.

Pragmatically: this type can be used to prevent certain branches of parameterized data types from coming into existence. For example, I've used this in a library for parsing various game trees something like this:

data RuleSet a            = Known !a | Unknown String
data GoRuleChoices        = Japanese | Chinese
data LinesOfActionChoices -- there are none in the spec!
type GoRuleSet            = RuleSet GoRuleChoices
type LinesOfActionRuleSet = RuleSet LinesOfActionChoices

The impact of this is that, when parsing a Lines of Action game tree, if there's a ruleset specified, we know its constructor will be Unknown, and can leave other branches off during pattern matches, etc.


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