So far, we've defined monads as single-layered things. Though in the Groenendijk, Stokhoff, and Veltmann homework, we had to figure out how to combine Reader, State, and Set monads in an ad-hoc way. In practice, one often wants to combine the abilities of several monads. Corresponding to each monad like Reader, there's a corresponding ReaderT **monad transformer**. That takes an existing monad M and adds a Reader monad layer to it. The way these are defined parallels the way the single-layer versions are defined. For example, here's the Reader monad: (* monadic operations for the Reader monad *) type 'a reader = env -> 'a;; let unit (a : 'a) : 'a reader = fun e -> a;; let bind (u: 'a reader) (f : 'a -> 'b reader) : 'b reader = fun e -> (fun v -> f v e) (u e);; We've just beta-expanded the familiar `f (u e) e` into `(fun v -> f v e) (u e)`, in order to factor out the parts where any Reader monad is being supplied as an argument to another function, as illustrated in the `bind` function in the following example. Then if we want instead to add a Reader layer to some arbitrary other monad M, with its own M.unit and M.bind, here's how we do it: (* monadic operations for the ReaderT monadic transformer *) (* We're not giving valid OCaml code, but rather something * that's conceptually easier to digest. * How you really need to write this in OCaml is more circuitous... * see http://lambda.jimpryor.net/code/tree_monadize.ml for some details. *) type ('a, M) readerT = env -> 'a M;; (* this is just an 'a M reader; but don't rely on that pattern to generalize *) let unit (a : 'a) : ('a, M) readerT = fun e -> M.unit a;; let bind (u : ('a, M) readerT) (f : 'a -> ('b, M) readerT) : ('b, M) readerT = fun e -> M.bind (u e) (fun v -> f v e);; Notice the key differences: where before we just returned `a`, now we instead return `M.unit a`. Where before we just supplied value `u e` of type `'a reader` as an argument to a function, now we instead `M.bind` the `'a reader` to that function. Notice also the differences in the types. What is the relation between Reader and ReaderT? Well, suppose you started with the Identity monad: type 'a identity = 'a;; let unit (a : 'a) : 'a = a;; let bind (u : 'a) (f : 'a -> 'b) : 'b = f u;; and you used the ReaderT transformer to add a Reader monad layer to the Identity monad. What do you suppose you would get? The relations between the State monad and the StateT monadic transformer are parallel: (* monadic operations for the State monad *) type 'a state = store -> ('a * store);; let unit (a : 'a) : 'a state = fun s -> (a, s);; let bind (u : 'a state) (f : 'a -> 'b state) : 'b state = fun s -> (fun (a, s') -> f a s') (u s);; We've used `(fun (a, s') -> f a s') (u s)` instead of the more familiar `let (a, s') = u s in f a s'` in order to factor out the part where a value of type `'a state` is supplied as an argument to a function. Now StateT will be: (* monadic operations for the StateT monadic transformer *) type ('a, M) stateT = store -> ('a * store) M;; (* notice this is not an 'a M state *) let unit (a : 'a) : ('a, M) stateT = fun s -> M.unit (a, s);; let bind (u : ('a, M) stateT) (f : 'a -> ('b, M) stateT) : ('b, M) stateT = fun s -> M.bind (u s) (fun (a, s') -> f a s');; Do you see the pattern? Where ordinarily we'd return an `'a` value, now we instead return an `'a M` value. Where ordinarily we'd supply a `'a state` value as an argument to a function, now we instead `M.bind` it to that function. Okay, now let's do the same thing for our Tree monad. (* monadic operations for the Tree monad *) type 'a tree = Leaf of 'a | Node of ('a tree) * ('a tree);; let unit (a: 'a) : 'a tree = Leaf a;; let rec bind (u : 'a tree) (f : 'a -> 'b tree) : 'b tree = match u with | Leaf a -> f a;; | Node (l, r) -> (fun l' r' -> Node (l', r')) (bind l f) (bind r f);; (* monadic operations for the TreeT monadic transformer *) (* NOTE THIS IS NOT YET WORKING --- STILL REFINING *) type ('a, M) treeT = 'a tree M;; let unit (a: 'a) : ('a, M) tree = M.unit (Leaf a);; let rec bind (u : ('a, M) tree) (f : 'a -> ('b, M) tree) : ('b, M) tree = match u with | Leaf a -> M.bind (f a) (fun b -> M.unit (Leaf b)) | Node (l, r) -> M.bind (bind l f) (fun l' -> M.bind (bind r f) (fun r' -> M.unit (Node (l', r'));; Compare this definition of `bind` for the TreeT monadic transformer to our earlier definition of `tree_monadize`, specialized for the Reader monad: let rec tree_monadize (f : 'a -> 'b reader) (t : 'a tree) : 'b tree reader = match t with | Leaf a -> reader_bind (f a) (fun b -> reader_unit (Leaf b)) | Node (l, r) -> reader_bind (tree_monadize f l) (fun l' -> reader_bind (tree_monadize f r) (fun r' -> reader_unit (Node (l', r'))));;