Why is this function allowed:
-- function 1
myfunc :: String
myfunc = do
x <- (return True)
show x
and this is not:
-- function 2
myfunc :: String
myfunc = do
x <- getLine
show x
The compile error:
Couldn't match type `[]' with `IO'
Expected type: IO Char
Actual type: String
I get why function 2 shouldn't work, but why then thus function 1 work?
and why does this then work:
-- function 3
myfunc = do
x <- getLine
return (show x)
I get that it returns IO String
then, but why is function 1 also not forced to do this?
In function1 the do
block in myfunc
is working in the list monad, because String
is really just [Char]
. In there, return True
just creates [True]
. When you do x <- return True
that "extracts" True
out of [True]
and binds it to x
. The next line show x
converts True
into a String "True"
. which being the return value the compiler value expects to see, ends up working fine.
Meanwhile in function2, the do
block in myfunc is also working on the list monad (for the same reason, String
being really [Char]
) but calls on getLine
which is only available in the IO
monad. So unsurprisingly, this fails.
-- EDIT 1
OP has added a function3
-- function 3
myfunc :: String
myfunc = do
x <- getLine
return (show x)
No this should not work for the same reason function2 fails.
-- EDIT 2
OP has updated function3 to fix a copy paste error.
-- function 3
myfunc = do
x <- getLine
return (show x)
This is mentioned in the comments, but for clarity sake, this works because, when the type information is unspecified, GHC makes it best inference and after seeing getLine
, it figures it’s IO String
which does provide getLine
.
Note - I wrote this answer with as casual a tone as I could manage without being wrong with the intention of making it approachable to a beginner level.
do
blocks work in the context of an arbitrary Monad
. The Monad
, in this case, is []
. The Monad
instance for lists is based on list comprehensions:
instance Monad [] where
return x = [x]
xs >>= f = [y | x <- xs, y <- f x]
You can desugar the do
notation thus:
myfunc :: String
myfunc = do
x <- (return True)
show x
-- ==>
myfunc = [y | x <- return True, y <- show x]
-- ==>
myfunc = [y | x <- [True], y <- show x]
In a list comprehension, x <- [True]
is really just the same as let x = True
, because you're only drawing one element from the list. So
myfunc = [y | y <- show True]
Of course, "the list of all y
such that y
is in show True
" is just show True
.
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