Difference between revisions of "Simple monad examples"

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All you really need to know, is that the >>= operator either returns "Nothing" if it is passed "Nothing" on its left-hand side; or if its left-hand side is a "Just ..." it strips off the just, and passes the contents into the function supplied on its right-hand side. Simple!
 
All you really need to know, is that the >>= operator either returns "Nothing" if it is passed "Nothing" on its left-hand side; or if its left-hand side is a "Just ..." it strips off the just, and passes the contents into the function supplied on its right-hand side. Simple!
   
Some simple exercises:
+
===Some simple exercises===
   
 
What would the following snippets resolve to?
 
What would the following snippets resolve to?
   
<haskell>
+
* <haskell>
 
Just 0 >>= (\ x -> if (x == 0) then fail "zero" else Just (x + 1) )
 
Just 0 >>= (\ x -> if (x == 0) then fail "zero" else Just (x + 1) )
  +
</haskell>
  +
  +
* <haskell>
 
Nothing >>= (\ x -> if (x == 0) then fail "zero" else Just (x + 1) )
 
Nothing >>= (\ x -> if (x == 0) then fail "zero" else Just (x + 1) )
 
</haskell>
 
</haskell>

Revision as of 21:46, 5 April 2021

This page is designed to show some simple examples of using monads, specifically using Maybe.

I personally found that I reached monad-enlightenment once I contrived this simple example while playing around to see the "guts" of a monadic expression:

Just 5 >>= (\ x -> if (x == 0) then fail "zero" else Just (x + 1) )

Which results in:

Just 6

All you really need to know, is that the >>= operator either returns "Nothing" if it is passed "Nothing" on its left-hand side; or if its left-hand side is a "Just ..." it strips off the just, and passes the contents into the function supplied on its right-hand side. Simple!

Some simple exercises

What would the following snippets resolve to?

  • Just 0 >>= (\ x -> if (x == 0) then fail "zero" else Just (x + 1) )
    
  • Nothing >>= (\ x -> if (x == 0) then fail "zero" else Just (x + 1) )
    

More examples can be found in the reference guide A tour of the Haskell Monad functions, by Henk-Jan van Tuyl.