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Home/ Questions/Q 7439349
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Editorial Team
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Editorial Team
Asked: May 29, 20262026-05-29T10:41:36+00:00 2026-05-29T10:41:36+00:00

I have seen references to the showS trick to build strings (e.g., in this

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I have seen references to the showS trick to build strings (e.g., in this discussion), but I have never seen a good description of it.

What is the showS trick?

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  1. Editorial Team
    Editorial Team
    2026-05-29T10:41:37+00:00Added an answer on May 29, 2026 at 10:41 am

    In the standard library, ShowS is defined as:

    type ShowS = String -> String
    

    This is a difference list.
    The trick is that a string xs is represented as a ShowS by the function that prepends it to any other list: (xs ++). This allows efficient concatenation, avoiding the problems of nested left-associative concatenation (i.e. ((as ++ bs) ++ cs) ++ ds). For example:

    hello = ("hello" ++)
    world = ("world" ++)
    
    -- We can "concatenate" ShowS values simply by composing them:
    helloworld = hello . world
    
    -- and turn them into Strings by passing them an empty list:
    helloworld' = helloworld ""
    

    It’s called ShowS because it’s used in the implementation of the standard Show typeclass to allow efficient showing of large, deeply-nested structures; as well as show, you can implement showsPrec, which has the type:

    showsPrec :: (Show a) => Int -> a -> ShowS
    

    This allows handling of operator precedence, and returns a ShowS value. The standard instances implement this instead of show for efficiency; show a is then defined in terms of it, as showsPrec 0 a "". (This default definition is in the Show typeclass itself, so you can just implement showsPrec for a complete instance.)

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