Yes, these ones:
{-#LANGUAGE TypeOperators, RankNTypes #-}
import Control.Morphism.Zygo
import Control.Morphism.Prepro
import Control.Morphism.Histo
import Control.Functor.Algebra
import Control.Functor.Extras
import Control.Functor.Fix
import Control.Comonad.Cofree
zygohistomorphic_prepromorphism
:: Functor f
=> Algebra f b
-> GAlgebra f (ZygoT (Cofree f) b) a
-> (f :~> f)
-> FixF f
-> a
zygohistomorphic_prepromorphism f
= g_prepro (distZygoT (liftAlgebra f) (distHisto id))
Yes, I know that they're a (HHOS) joke. I'm looking for a real-world example for simple hack value and last, but not least, to add it to the wiki saying "This is the idiomatic way to express XYZ". I will put a bounty on this should you fail to come up with a solution. If you're completely lost on what they're about, Edward posted a short explanation on reddit.
Eligible Answers must:
do something at least remotely and theoretically computationally useful. That is, answers that reduce to id
are out.
use all the features of the scheme, no passing in of id, or const, or equivalent.
not equally well be expressible by a simple, vanilla fold or such, so don't merely implement product
in a meandering way.
Bonus points will be given to:
Well-known problem or algorithm
solved, respectively expressed, in an unusual way that gains
clarity and/or performance
and/or hack value
and/or lulz, in roughly that order, as well as
high-ranking answers (yay democracy)
Please also note Edward's answer below. What ZHPM implementation you use is your choice.
Sharon Curtis and Shin-Cheng Mu have a Functional Pearl using zygomorphisms to find maximally dense segments (a generalization of maximum segment sums). Zygomorphisms are seemingly a good fit for sliding window problems once you are accustomed to them.
http://www.iis.sinica.edu.tw/~scm/2010/functional-pearl-maximally-dense-segments/
I'd nominate the authors for extra credit as they've avoided the use of the fixed-point Mu functor.