Difference between revisions of "Bottom"
JaredUpdike (talk | contribs) (Added remark that _|_ is a member of any type) |
JaredUpdike (talk | contribs) (mentioned Prelude.undefined) |
||
Line 21: | Line 21: | ||
<haskell> |
<haskell> |
||
bottom = error "Non-terminating computation!" |
bottom = error "Non-terminating computation!" |
||
+ | </haskell> |
||
+ | |||
+ | Indeed, the Prelude exports a function |
||
+ | |||
+ | <haskell> |
||
+ | undefined = error "Prelude; undefined" |
||
</haskell> |
</haskell> |
||
Revision as of 22:08, 4 January 2008
The term bottom refers to a computation which never completes successfully. That includes a computation that fails due to some kind of error, and a computation that just goes into an infinite loop (without returning any data).
The mathematical symbol for bottom is '⊥'. That's Unicode character 22A5 hex = 8869 decimal. Also available in HTML as '⊥' and in LaTeX as '\bot' (within math mode). In plain ASCII, it's often written as the extremely ugly character sequence '_|_
'.
Bottom is a member of any type, even the trivial type () or the equivalent simple type:
data Unary = Unary
If it were not, the compiler could solve the halting problem and statically determine whether any computation terminated.
Bottom can be expressed in Haskell thus:
bottom = bottom
or
bottom = error "Non-terminating computation!"
Indeed, the Prelude exports a function
undefined = error "Prelude; undefined"