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Home/ Questions/Q 677981
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Editorial Team
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Editorial Team
Asked: May 14, 20262026-05-14T01:05:56+00:00 2026-05-14T01:05:56+00:00

After playing around with haskell a bit I stumbled over this function: Prelude Data.Maclaurin>

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After playing around with haskell a bit I stumbled over this function:

Prelude Data.Maclaurin> :t ((+) . ($) . (+))
((+) . ($) . (+)) :: (Num a) => a -> (a -> a) -> a -> a

(Data.Maclaurin is exported by the package vector-space.) So it takes a Num, a function, another Num and ultimately returns a Num. What magic makes the following work?

Prelude Data.Maclaurin> ((+) . ($) . (+)) 1 2 3
6

2 is obviously not a function (a->a) or did I miss out on something?

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1 Answer

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  1. Editorial Team
    Editorial Team
    2026-05-14T01:05:56+00:00Added an answer on May 14, 2026 at 1:05 am

    The Data.NumInstances module of the same package defines a Num instance for functions that return numbers:

    instance Num b => Num (a->b) where
      (+)         = liftA2 (+)
      (*)         = liftA2 (*)
      fromInteger = pure . fromInteger
      ...
    

    In Haskell an integer literal like 2 is generic so that it can represent a number for any instance of Num:

    Prelude> :t 2
    2 :: (Num t) => t
    

    To convert it to an actual number of the type required in a specific context, fromInteger from the Num class is called.

    Since the helper module mentioned above defines an instance of Num for functions, 2 can now be converted to a function with the fromInteger method specified there.
    So ghci calls fromInteger 2 to get the function required as the second parameter of the construct in the question. The whole expression then happens to evaluate to 6.

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