IO with Exceptions tracked on the type-level.
Note: The package is considered to be used with the QualifiedDo
feature,
so hence the support only of GHC-9.0 and upper.
Since this is a literate haskell file, we need to specify all our language extensions and imports up front.
{-# LANGUAGE QualifiedDo #-}
{-# LANGUAGE DataKinds #-}
{-# LANGUAGE DerivingStrategies #-}
{-# LANGUAGE DeriveAnyClass #-}
It is recomended to use eio
library qualified, as it reimplements many
standard functions.
import Control.Exception (Exception)
import EIO (EIO)
import qualified EIO
Let's also define our own exception to play with:
data MyErr = MyErr
deriving stock (Show)
deriving anyclass (Exception)
The main function of our module will look like this:
main :: IO ()
main = EIO.runEIO safeMain
Let's now write the safe main function that should not have any exceptions
pushed to the actual main
function, as the list of exceptions on type level
should be empty.
This means, that if we throw the exception inside but don't handle it properly,
it won't type check, as the list of exceptions in EIO
will contain at least
one element:
-- - Type error!
safeMainWrong :: EIO '[] ()
safeMainWrong = EIO.do
EIO.throw MyErr
And the error will exactly point out to the fact that the empty list is expected, but got non-empty instead:
error:
• Couldn't match type: '[MyErr]
with: '[]
Expected: EIO '[] ()
Actual: EIO '[MyErr] ()
• In a stmt of a qualified 'do' block: EIO.throw MyErr
In the expression: EIO.do EIO.throw MyErr
In an equation for ‘safeMain’: safeMain = EIO.do EIO.throw MyErr
|
xx | EIO.throw MyErr
| ^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^
In order for it to type check, we need to handle each thrown exception properly, so that you have an empty list in the end:
safeMain :: EIO '[] ()
safeMain = EIO.do
EIO.return ()
EIO.throw MyErr `EIO.catch` (\MyErr -> EIO.return ())