How to Install and Uninstall ghc-generic-deriving Package on openSUSE Leap

Last updated: November 08,2024

1. Install "ghc-generic-deriving" package

Learn how to install ghc-generic-deriving on openSUSE Leap

$ sudo zypper refresh $ sudo zypper install ghc-generic-deriving

2. Uninstall "ghc-generic-deriving" package

This is a short guide on how to uninstall ghc-generic-deriving on openSUSE Leap:

$ sudo zypper remove ghc-generic-deriving

3. Information about the ghc-generic-deriving package on openSUSE Leap

Information for package ghc-generic-deriving:
---------------------------------------------
Repository : Main Repository
Name : ghc-generic-deriving
Version : 1.14.1-bp155.2.14
Arch : x86_64
Vendor : openSUSE
Installed Size : 2.4 MiB
Installed : No
Status : not installed
Source package : ghc-generic-deriving-1.14.1-bp155.2.14.src
Upstream URL : https://hackage.haskell.org/package/generic-deriving
Summary : Generic programming library for generalised deriving
Description :
This package provides functionality for generalising the deriving mechanism in
Haskell to arbitrary classes. It was first described in the paper:
* /A generic deriving mechanism for Haskell/. Jose Pedro Magalhaes, Atze
Dijkstra, Johan Jeuring, and Andres Loeh. Haskell'10.
The current implementation integrates with the new GHC Generics. See
for more information.
Template Haskell code is provided for supporting older GHCs.
This library is organized as follows:
* "Generics.Deriving.Base" defines the core functionality for GHC generics,
including the 'Generic(1)' classes and representation data types. On modern
versions of GHC, this simply re-exports "GHC.Generics" from 'base'. On older
versions of GHC, this module backports parts of "GHC.Generics" that were not
included at the time, including 'Generic(1)' instances.
* "Generics.Deriving.TH" implements Template Haskell functionality for deriving
instances of 'Generic(1)'.
* Educational code: in order to provide examples of how to define and use
"GHC.Generics"-based defaults, this library offers a number of modules which
define examples of type classes along with default implementations for the
classes' methods. Currently, the following modules are provided:
"Generics.Deriving.Copoint", "Generics.Deriving.ConNames",
"Generics.Deriving.Enum", "Generics.Deriving.Eq", "Generics.Deriving.Foldable",
"Generics.Deriving.Functor", "Generics.Deriving.Monoid",
"Generics.Deriving.Semigroup", "Generics.Deriving.Show",
"Generics.Deriving.Traversable", and "Generics.Deriving.Uniplate".
It is worth emphasizing that these modules are primarly intended for
educational purposes. Many of the classes in these modules resemble other
commonly used classes—for example, 'GShow' from "Generics.Deriving.Show"
resembles 'Show' from 'base'—but in general, the classes that
'generic-deriving' defines are not drop-in replacements. Moreover, the generic
defaults that 'generic-deriving' provide often make simplifying assumptions
that may violate expectations of how these classes might work elsewhere.
For example, the generic default for 'GShow' does not behave exactly like
'deriving Show' would.
If you are seeking "GHC.Generics"-based defaults for type classes in 'base',
consider using the ' generic-data>' library.
* "Generics.Deriving.Default" provides newtypes that allow leveraging the
generic defaults in this library using the 'DerivingVia' GHC language
extension.
* "Generics.Deriving" re-exports "Generics.Deriving.Base",
"Generics.Deriving.Default", and a selection of educational modules.

5. The same packages on other Linux Distributions