|
Control.Monad.Error | Portability | non-portable (multi-parameter type classes) | Stability | experimental | Maintainer | libraries@haskell.org |
|
|
|
|
|
Description |
- Computation type:
- Computations which may fail or throw exceptions.
- Binding strategy:
- Failure records information about the cause/location
of the failure. Failure values bypass the bound function,
other values are used as inputs to the bound function.
- Useful for:
- Building computations from sequences of functions that may fail
or using exception handling to structure error handling.
- Zero and plus:
- Zero is represented by an empty error and the plus operation
executes its second argument if the first fails.
- Example type:
- Either String a
The Error monad (also called the Exception monad).
|
|
Synopsis |
|
|
|
Documentation |
|
module Control.Monad.Error.Class |
|
|
The error monad transformer. It can be used to add error handling to other
monads.
The ErrorT Monad structure is parameterized over two things:
- e - The error type.
- m - The inner monad.
Here are some examples of use:
-- wraps IO action that can throw an error e
type ErrorWithIO e a = ErrorT e IO a
==> ErrorT (IO (Either e a))
-- IO monad wrapped in StateT inside of ErrorT
type ErrorAndStateWithIO e s a = ErrorT e (StateT s IO) a
==> ErrorT (StateT s IO (Either e a))
==> ErrorT (StateT (s -> IO (Either e a,s)))
| Constructors | | Instances | (Error e, MonadRWS r w s m) => MonadRWS r w s (ErrorT e m) | (Monad m, Error e) => MonadError e (ErrorT e m) | (Error e, MonadReader r m) => MonadReader r (ErrorT e m) | (Error e, MonadState s m) => MonadState s (ErrorT e m) | (Error e, MonadWriter w m) => MonadWriter w (ErrorT e m) | Error e => MonadTrans (ErrorT e) | Monad m => Functor (ErrorT e m) | (Monad m, Error e) => Monad (ErrorT e m) | (Error e, MonadCont m) => MonadCont (ErrorT e m) | (MonadFix m, Error e) => MonadFix (ErrorT e m) | (Error e, MonadIO m) => MonadIO (ErrorT e m) | (Monad m, Error e) => MonadPlus (ErrorT e m) |
|
|
|
|
|
module Control.Monad |
|
module Control.Monad.Fix |
|
module Control.Monad.Trans |
|
Example 1: Custom Error Data Type
|
|
Here is an example that demonstrates the use of a custom Error data type with
the throwError and catchError exception mechanism from MonadError.
The example throws an exception if the user enters an empty string
or a string longer than 5 characters. Otherwise it prints length of the string.
-- This is the type to represent length calculation error.
data LengthError = EmptyString -- Entered string was empty.
| StringTooLong Int -- A string is longer than 5 characters.
-- Records a length of the string.
| OtherError String -- Other error, stores the problem description.
-- We make LengthError an instance of the Error class
-- to be able to throw it as an exception.
instance Error LengthError where
noMsg = OtherError "A String Error!"
strMsg s = OtherError s
-- Converts LengthError to a readable message.
instance Show LengthError where
show EmptyString = "The string was empty!"
show (StringTooLong len) =
"The length of the string (" ++ (show len) ++ ") is bigger than 5!"
show (OtherError msg) = msg
-- For our monad type constructor, we use Either LengthError
-- which represents failure using Left LengthError
-- or a successful result of type a using Right a.
type LengthMonad = Either LengthError
main = do
putStrLn "Please enter a string:"
s <- getLine
reportResult (calculateLength s)
-- Wraps length calculation to catch the errors.
-- Returns either length of the string or an error.
calculateLength :: String -> LengthMonad Int
calculateLength s = (calculateLengthOrFail s) `catchError` Left
-- Attempts to calculate length and throws an error if the provided string is
-- empty or longer than 5 characters.
-- The processing is done in Either monad.
calculateLengthOrFail :: String -> LengthMonad Int
calculateLengthOrFail [] = throwError EmptyString
calculateLengthOrFail s | len > 5 = throwError (StringTooLong len)
| otherwise = return len
where len = length s
-- Prints result of the string length calculation.
reportResult :: LengthMonad Int -> IO ()
reportResult (Right len) = putStrLn ("The length of the string is " ++ (show len))
reportResult (Left e) = putStrLn ("Length calculation failed with error: " ++ (show e))
|
|
Example 2: Using ErrorT Monad Transformer
|
|
ErrorT monad transformer can be used to add error handling to another monad.
Here is an example how to combine it with an IO monad:
import Control.Monad.Error
-- An IO monad which can return String failure.
-- It is convenient to define the monad type of the combined monad,
-- especially if we combine more monad transformers.
type LengthMonad = ErrorT String IO
main = do
-- runErrorT removes the ErrorT wrapper
r <- runErrorT calculateLength
reportResult r
-- Asks user for a non-empty string and returns its length.
-- Throws an error if user enters an empty string.
calculateLength :: LengthMonad Int
calculateLength = do
-- all the IO operations have to be lifted to the IO monad in the monad stack
liftIO $ putStrLn "Please enter a non-empty string: "
s <- liftIO getLine
if null s
then throwError "The string was empty!"
else return $ length s
-- Prints result of the string length calculation.
reportResult :: Either String Int -> IO ()
reportResult (Right len) = putStrLn ("The length of the string is " ++ (show len))
reportResult (Left e) = putStrLn ("Length calculation failed with error: " ++ (show e))
|
|
Produced by Haddock version 0.9 |