Haskell, Nix and Vim: Getting started

In this post I am going to make some suggestions on how to get a nice environment for writing Haskell code in Vim using Nix and various other tools. Of course there are many other routes that you can take and tools that you can pick to get the same or, depending on your goals, better results ;)

A Disclaimer On Code Completion

There are two (or maybe 1.5 since hie does actually use ghc-mod somehow) ways to get code completion for Haskell code:

I am going to suggest to use neither. The latest official ghc-mod release only supports ghc < 8.2 , the most recent (hie) version is broken for cabal-2.4.1.0 .

Before you get the impression that I am being grumpy, I am not. I applaud all the contributors that are working on hie and I believe the whole LSP (language server protocol) approach is fantastic. Yet I wish I could get back all the time that I have wasted on getting ghc-mod and similar tools to work. I think code completion is nice, but I am convinced you don’t need it in order to call your setup efficient.

The Nix Side Of Things

I know there is a huge number of people that use Stack and are really happy with it. I just happened to get into Nix before Stack was even around and then basically never felt a real incentive to switch. Anyhow …

Tell Cabal About Nix

The first thing you want to do is make sure you enable the Nix integration of Cabal by adding (or uncommenting) the following in your ~/.cabal/config file:

nix : True

As described here Cabal is now going to run all cabal commands in the nix environment provided via shell.nix or default.nix . It is also going to obtain the dependencies via Nix.

Nixifying Your Project

The standard way to crate a nix derivation for your project is to use cabal2nix:

$ cd random-haskell-project $ cabal2nix --shell . > shell.nix $ cabal configure && cabal build

This will do for some ad-hoc hacking but if you are actively developing some project you don’t want to manually keep your shell.nix file up-to-date with your cabal file each time you add a dependency or change something else.

Thus what you want to use instead is a default.nix file that does this for you. The callCabal2nix nix library function does just that. Below are rough templates for writing your own default.nix and shell.nix files for your project:

default.nix

{ compiler ? "ghc863" , pkgs ? import < nixpkgs > {} }: let haskellPackages = pkgs . haskell . packages . ${ compiler }; drv = haskellPackages . callCabal2nix "foo" ./. {}; in { foo = drv ; foo-shell = haskellPackages . shellFor { packages = p : [ drv ]; buildInputs = with pkgs ; [ cabal-install hlint ghcid ]; }; }

Both the compiler and the nixpkgs set are passed arguments with default values but you can override both using --argstr (for compiler ) and --arg (for pkgs ).

(for ) and (for ). If you want your build to be deterministic you should really consider to pin nixpkgs to a certain revision (here is a nice article by Vaibhav on pinning nixpkgs). Otherwise you might be surprised to find that suddenly your code doesn’t build anymore after some nix-channel update.

Add any tools that you want to have available for working on your project to the buildInputs of foo-shell . Note though that whatever you are adding there is only going to be available inside the nix-shell. If you expect Vim to execute hlint you will have to also run Vim inside the nix-shell. Either that or you install those tools to your nix profile or add them to your environment in configuration.nix if you are a NixOS user.

shell.nix

( import ./. {}) . foo-shell

With the cabal Nix support enabled you can now just run cabal configure and under the hood cabal is going to execute nix-shell --run "cabal configure" .

Once your project grows bigger and you need more fine grained control this simple approach won’t be sufficient anymore. Once you’ve reached that point you might want to consult Nix And Haskell In Production by Gabriel Gonazles

The Vim Side Of Things

I switched to neovim a while ago but I guess that everything I use is probably going to also work just fine with Vim - You should switch to neovim though :)

My first suggestion is that you install haskell-vim which provides you with sane and improved highlighting and code indentation. It should just work out of the box after installing (I hope you are using some plugin manager) but there are also a couple of configuration options for fine tuning indentation behavior.

I quite like this one. This plugin depends on Unite.vim which has actually been discontinued but the plugin continues to work just fine. You can use it to search for function names and have the appropriate import statement added to the top of your file automatically. This is by no means mind boggling magic but I do find it very convenient. I use the following mapping:

nnoremap < leader > hI : execute "Unite -start-insert haskellimport" < CR >

Another Unite based plugin which I find very convenient. It’s basically just a vim integrated hoogle search with as-you-type results in the Unite buffer. I mapped it to <leader>hs as follows:

nnoremap < leader > hs : execute "Unite hoogle" < CR >

Hitting enter on a selection will open the respective documentation link on hackage for you.

This is definitely the most sophisticated plugin in this list. While the name suggests it might be for intero only, it does actually work with just ghci or cabal repl instead just fine. From the README on GitHub:

Intero makes working with Haskell painless by harnessing the power of the GHCi REPL. Intero was originally built alongside an Emacs package. This plugin ports much of the Emacs plugin functionality into a package for Neovim.

One thing that I definitely missed after giving up on ghc-mod was easy, editor-integrated type information. Fortunately you can get that with intero-neovim . There is extensive documentation through the README.md and also the vim documentation Check out the available functions and add some keyboard mappings.

Make it play nicely with ghci

Tell intero-neovim that you want to use ghci :

let g:intero_backend = { \ 'command' : 'ghci' , \ 'cwd' : expand ( '%:p:h' ), \ }

Enable the collection of type information in your .ghci file: :set +c The ghci user guide has details. Adding this is essential to get intero-neovim to work.

A Note On Error Reporting

intero-neovim also has support for integration with neomake which will report any errors in the current buffer on safe. As it happens I use ale instead and thus don’t make use of this. Feel free to explore this feature if you are interested. Of course you can also just stick to ghcid as described below.

There are various code linter plugins available and ale is one of the more popular ones these days. It supports checking the current buffer with various tools and also supports applying fixes in some scenarios (I am not using that though). As a matter of fact it might well be that I will drop using ale sooner or later but for now here is my configuration:

let g:ale_linters = { 'haskell' : [ 'hlint' , 'ghc' ]} let g:ale_haskell_ghc_options = '-fno-code -v0 -isrc'

What you get from that is live, asynchronous as-you-type validation of your buffer contents with both ghc and hlint . Do you really need it? Maybe – More about this at the end of this blog post.

The One Tool You Definitely Want: ghcid

The one tool you most definitely want to install from everything I have mentioned so far is ghcid. Here are detailed instructions on how to get it to work:

$ cd your-awesome-project $ ghcid # the end <3

To be fair, you might have to tell ghcid the command to invoke with the right target to load and :set -isrc to your .ghci file if your code actually resides inside src/ but apart from that it really is that simple. Now ghcid will monitor your code and display any occurring errors. If your project has tests you can also configure ghcid to run those when there have been changes. Consult the README.md on details and links to useful additional resources.

Closing Thoughts Or “Forget most of what I’ve just told you”

What I described above is mostly just a selection of random tools that happen to work for me at the moment. There sure are alternatives to probably each of those.

My recommendations for a solid Haskell development environment are:

Use hlint: If you are, like me, not a super experienced Haskell Developer I would suggest to integrate hlint into your editor/workflow of choice. hlint is the closest thing to a pair programming buddy making suggestions on how to improve your code. (Note: That being said, do not hesitate to ignore suggestions if you either don’t understand them or simply prefer the way your code looks right now) Use hoogle: If you end up using some sort of plugin/integration for your editor, fine. Otherwise just use hoogle on the command line or add a command to ~/.ghc/ghci.conf so you can call it from within ghci :def hoogle \s -> return $ ":! hoogle --count=15 \"" ++ s ++ "\"" Use ghcid: It is fast and it just works. The error messages that you get from ghc can at times look intimidating but more often than not they do actually point you in the right direction. Not only that, with typed holes you can even ask the compiler to help you out: Moving Towards Dialogue talks about using type holes in Haskell in general.

Typed Holes: talks about the valid hole fit suggestions available in ghc >= 8.6.x The error messages have been continuously improving and will even get better. Try to make good use of them. Use the REPL Luke!: The integration offered by intero-neovim is nice but you can also just invoke cabal repl and explore and test and hack. You can find the most important facts and features about ghci here and in the ghci user guide. In case you haven’t heard about it already, with ghc 8.6.x you get the :doc command in ghci which makes haddock documentation available inside the repl. Pretty nice, don’t you think?

These are the things that qualify as good tooling when we talk about Haskell. Do not confuse that with good editor integration. Being able to search for FilePath -> IO Text and get back Data.Text.IO readFile or asking for the type signature of readFile and getting back FilePath -> IO Text is great tooling. Doing all of that from your editor is good editor integration.

The Actual Epilogue

Compared to the other programming languages that I have been using, Haskell definitely has some fantastic tooling available. With Haskell IDE Engine getting more and more mature the editor integration is also getting smoother. Happy Hacking (Or should I say Happy Haskell Programming!).