# HPath Support for well-typed paths in Haskell. ## Motivation The motivation came during development of [hsfm](https://github.com/hasufell/hsfm) which has a pretty strict File type, but lacks a strict Path type, e.g. for user input. The library that came closest to my needs was [path](https://github.com/chrisdone/path), but the API turned out to be oddly complicated for my use case, so I decided to fork it. ## Differences to 'path' I wasn't happy with the way it dealt with Dir vs File things. In his version of the library, a `Path b Dir` always ends with a trailing path separator and `Path b File` never ends with a trailing path separator. IMO, it is nonsensical to make a Dir vs File distinction on path level, although it first seems nice. Some of the reasons are: * a path is just that: a path. It is completely disconnected from IO level and even if a `Dir`/`File` type theoretically allows us to say "this path ought to point to a file", there is literally zero guarantee that it will hold true at runtime. So this basically gives a false feeling of a type-safe file distinction. * it's imprecise about Dir vs File distinction, which makes it even worse, because a directory is also a file (just not a regular file). Add symlinks to that and the confusion is complete. * it makes the API oddly complicated for use cases where we basically don't care (yet) whether something turns out to be a directory or not Still, it comes also with a few perks: * it simplifies some functions, because they now have guarantees whether a path ends in a trailing path separator or not * it may be safer for interaction with other library functions, which behave differently depending on a trailing path separator (like probably shelly) Not limited to, but also in order to fix my remarks without breaking any benefits, I did: * rename the `Dir`/`File` types to `TPS`/`NoTPS`, so it's clear we are only giving information about trailing path separators and not actual file types we don't know about yet * add a `MaybeTPS` type, which does not mess with trailing path separators and also gives no guarantees about them... then added `toNoTPS` and `toTPS` to allow type-safe conversion * make some functions accept more general types, so we don't unnecessarily force paths with trailing separators for `()` for example... instead these functions now examine the paths to still have correct behavior. This is really minor overhead. You might say now "but then I can append filepath to filepath". Well, as I said... we don't know whether it's a "filepath" at all. * merge `filename` and `dirname` into `basename` and make `parent` be `dirname`, so the function names match the name of the POSIX ones, which do (almost) the same... * fix a bug in `basename` (formerly `dirname`) which broke the type guarantees * add a pattern synonym for easier pattern matching without exporting the internal Path constructor ## Consequences So what does that mean? Well, it means that this library does not and cannot make any guarantees about what a filepath is meant for or what it might point to. And it doesn't pretend it can. So when you strip the trailing path separator of a path that points to a directory and then shove it into some function which expects a regular file... then that function will very likely blow up. That's the nature of IO. There is no type that can save you from interfacing such low-level libraries. The filesystem is in constant change. What might have been a regular file 2 seconds ago, can now be a directory or a symlink. That means you need a proper File type that is tied to your IO code. This is what [hsfm](https://github.com/hasufell/hsfm) does. It currently is not a library, maybe it will be in the future.