@AaronHall Well, I had a couple good conversations about Haskell with Duplode in here a few weeks ago, so I starred the room, and just now I clicked "rejoin favorite rooms" :P
Loosely - a Monad with type signature m a is essentially a container m, of any type a. It's like a tuple of length one, with two methods/functions. The first function is return which creates the monad (return a -> m a). The second is "bind", written >>= has the signature m a -> (a -> m b) -> m b. It works like a pipe, where you have (mixing types with the function, so this isn't real Haskell:) m a >>= (a -> m b) >>= (b -> m c) >>= ... and so on.
if it were easy to just make a new operator, I would have used >>= instead, but I think it's actually nice that making new operators is hard in Python, languages with a surplus of three character operators are much harder to pick up.
I chose | because of the comparison I like to make between the >>= operator and unix pipes.
well, I need associativity, and if the result of a|b is a partially applied function object, it's no longer a monad.
I probably need compose, and in Python, I'll have to write my own.
I'm also thinking about the problem of how to solve where I'd need a redundant function for each monad class.
but I think Haskell has the same problem.
I could make them methods of the abstract class and that could solve the type problem, but then the signatures would be different (m a -> m b instead of a -> m b) and I'd like to keep the signatures the same.
if I let bind take care of instantiating the monad, the signature becomes a -> b.
maybe a @monadic decorator could solve the problem...
they don't exist for the purposes of my exploration. It would be like looking up the answers for a crossword puzzle before trying to finish it yourself.
besides, better than half chance they're terribad and incorrect.
I try to avoid reading other answers when working on my canonical ones for that reason. Only when I've constructed my full answer do I start critiquing the other ones.
@LeifWillerts you have like 2 or 3 minutes (I forget which) before messages become uneditable. I can edit them because I'm a mod (e.g. I fixed your __or__ where you left out the backtick) but I usually avoid it.