Summary: Rewriting the Prelude should be done in a separate package and take a few years to complete, hopefully building a consensus and improving the result.

My recent suggestion that the Prelude shouldn't be rewritten to incorporate Foldable / Traversable generated a lot of feedback. It's clear some people strongly agree, and some strongly disagree. So instead of continuing the argument, in this post I'm going to describe how I think the people who want to change the Prelude should go about it.

There were a lot of comments that we should optimise Haskell for practitioners, not beginners - in particular that there should be Prelude (for advanced users) and Prelude.Simple (for beginners). My personal opinion is that if we have two Prelude's, why not make the beginner one the default one? Switching to the non-default one probably takes one line of moderately advanced syntax (currently import Prelude(); import Prelude.Advanced ). For a beginner, writing a simple one line program, that more than doubles the complexity. For a moderate user, that's almost certainly outweighed by lines of LANGUAGE pragmas. (I'm also not sure that I want the "Advanced" Prelude, but that's not relevant to this post.)

Step 1: Write the new Prelude in a package

The first step to proposing a new Prelude should be to write Prelude.Advanced in a separate package on Hackage. Let's assume we have a package base-advanced with a module Prelude.Advanced . The Prelude is not trivial, and translating high-level design goals (e.g. move Foldable into the Prelude) requires some design choices to translate into concrete code.

Step 2: Gain users and feedback

Rather than roll out the Prelude to everyone at once, slowly try and persuade people that your Prelude is superior to the existing one. In doing so, advanced users can start trying out the Prelude, and describing their experiences with it. Does it require Foldable to gain a size method? Does it show up a GHC error message that could be better? Do we need some new type of defaulting? Does profiling give poor results without some manually inserted cost centre? Is a direct list isomorphism a better type class to start from (as F# does with IEnumerable)? Given the number of enthusiastic supporters, this step should be easy.

Step 3: Incorporate feedback

The feedback from step 2 needs incorporating into the package, and potentially into GHC itself. I expect that will result in a significant number of revisions, and perhaps significant departures from the original design. Note that the classy-prelude package is following the steps above, and has had 38 revisions on Hackage so far.

Step 4: Gain acceptance

Before going any further, some critical mass of people need to agree the new way is preferable. There may turn out to be competing proposals, and hopefully as a community we can find consensus and identify the best ideas (as we are currently doing with IO streaming libraries).

Step 5: Move to base

Once we have agreement on what the new Prelude should look like, it should probably be moved into base. At this point, based on all the experience we've got, we can decide whether it becomes Prelude or Prelude.Advanced . At the same time as moving into base, we should decide on the simpler story, but what that decision looks like, will depend on what the proposed Prelude looks like.

The current approach

There are a number of areas that current approach worry me. The change was made directly in the base Prelude, based on some agreement of high-level design decisions, and has already resulted in unexpected additions to the Foldable class. The Prelude will first be exposed to lots of users once GHC 7.10 ships, by which point iterating on feedback will be slow and difficult. The plan for the "beginner" version is to encourage beginners to use the haskell2010 package, which I don't think has been thought out (as someone who tried to use the haskell98 package for a short while, the exception change meant you couldn't use haskell98 and base in the same package, which is basically fatal).