What if I have an IO String and I want to convert it to an Int to pass it to a function that takes an Int? This gives a compiler error:
main :: IO ()
main = do
valueStr <- getLine
value <- read valueStr :: Int -- Couldn't match expected type `IO t0' with actual type `Int'
putStrLn $ (show value) ++ " ^ 2 = " ++ (show $ sq value)
sq :: Int -> Int
sq x = x * x
"putting something at the end of a list that's fifty million entries long is going to take a while. However, putting something at the beginning of a list using the : operator (also called the cons operator) is instantaneous. "
There are things about Haskell that are not-so-trivial to predict when it comes to performance, but there are ways to deal with that, when you're at the point where you should care.
If you're worried about performance of lists, you can also use mutable arrays within the IO monad. Sadly, last time I checked, they were about 100x slower :)
class CanMinimum a b | a -> b where
minimum :: a -> b
instance (Ord a) => CanMinimum [a] a where
minimum = Data.List.minimum
instance (Ord a) => CanMinimum (a, a) a where
minimum = uncurry Prelude.min
@CatPlusPlus explicit is better than implicit? Aren't most of haskells types inferred? aka implicitly.. discovered? Or do you mean about type conversions/casts?
I don't like = for comparison; = in mathematics means that both sides are equal. The point of comparison is that you are not sure if they are equal or not.