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Haskell Design Patterns

You're reading from   Haskell Design Patterns Take your Haskell and functional programming skills to the next level by exploring new idioms and design patterns

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Product type Paperback
Published in Nov 2015
Publisher
ISBN-13 9781783988723
Length 166 pages
Edition 1st Edition
Languages
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Author (1):
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Ryan Lemmer Ryan Lemmer
Author Profile Icon Ryan Lemmer
Ryan Lemmer
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Toc

The problems with lazy I/O

Let's use the hGetLine function alongside the hGetContents function:

main = do
  h <- openFile "jabberwocky.txt" ReadMode
  firstLine <- hGetLine h     -- returns a string
  contents  <- hGetContents h -- returns a "promise"

  hClose h           -– close file
  print $ words firstLine
  print $ words contents

We close the file before consuming the firstLine string and the contents stream:

  print $ words firstLine
    ["'Twas","brillig,","and","the","slithy","toves"]
  print $ words contents
    []

The contents is a live stream that gets turned off when the file is closed. The firstLine is an eager string and survives the closing of the file.

The preceding example points to some serious problems with the lazy I/O:

  • The order of the side effects is tied to the order of the lazy evaluation. Because the order of lazy evaluation is not explicit, the order of effects...
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