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Home/ Questions/Q 5960231
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Editorial Team
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Editorial Team
Asked: May 22, 20262026-05-22T18:47:52+00:00 2026-05-22T18:47:52+00:00

Shouldn’t this definition be allowed in a lazy language like Haskell in which functions

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Shouldn’t this definition be allowed in a lazy language like Haskell in which functions are curried?

apply f [] = f
apply f (x:xs) = apply (f x) xs

It’s basically a function that applies the given function to the given list of arguments and is very easily done in Lisp for example.
Are there any workarounds?

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  1. Editorial Team
    Editorial Team
    2026-05-22T18:47:52+00:00Added an answer on May 22, 2026 at 6:47 pm

    It is hard to give a static type to the apply function, since its type depends on the type of the (possibly heterogeneous) list argument. There are at least two ways one way to write this function in Haskell that I can think of:

    Using reflection

    We can defer type checking of the application until runtime:

    import Data.Dynamic
    import Data.Typeable
    
    apply :: Dynamic -> [Dynamic] -> Dynamic
    apply f []      = f
    apply f (x:xs)  = apply (f `dynApp` x) xs
    

    Note that now the Haskell program may fail with a type error at runtime.


    Via type class recursion

    Using the semi-standard Text.Printf trick (invented by augustss, IIRC), a solution can be coded up in this style (exercise). It may not be very useful though, and still requires some trick to hide the types in the list.

    Edit: I couldn’t come up with a way to write this, without using dynamic types or hlists/existentials. Would love to see an example

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