The reason why I like writing in Haskell is because it allows me to write in a functional way (partial application, mutation in done by a -> a functions, composition, even monads some times but only when it makes sense).
@BartekBanachewicz Nope, may you link it again here?
You can simply use the fact that the function monad (->) r already has an instance for MonadReader r defined in Control.Monad.Reader. You can write functions using just the MonadReader constraint and use them either as normal functions or in other ReaderT monads:
f :: MonadReader Int m => m Int...
@Jefffrey see, my point is that pure monads aren't different from functions. And a lot of times what appears to be functional code is actually imperative
or at least it's easier to reason about it in imperative way
@BartekBanachewicz I would use State for things that are obviously state. Take random number generators: every time you generate a number you get back a (number, newGen); that's clearly State.
And even then I wouldn't expose it outside of the function.
Also it really depends on the case, but the point I'm trying to make is that I do not strive to have everything in a do notation because it looks and feels imperative (as you do).
@Jefffrey What's complicated there? If a function is contextless but you want to treat it as contextful, you either lift it or fmap it or applicatively apply
@Jefffrey You're not using arrows here, that'd be the problem I suppose.
@Jefffrey nah, it doesn't, you're just trying to justify your unwillingness to learn monads properly with saying that do is imperative and as such you'll avoid it for some reason
@BartekBanachewicz Not at all, You just said you do not strive for writing monads everywhere, and I asked you how many times you use monads in your code.
Listen it's just an intuition I have. I trust my intuitions a lot. And I'd really like to concretize it with a project that uses those principles I told you about. Until then I won't be able to even remotely win this discussion.
While I value your experience, I don't think your primary goal when writing code is the same as mine (I write for the pleasure of writing code, to the point where having a product in the end is just a side effect; you do it to ship things with it).
I remember spending my first 5 years with PHP trying to find the best design for a framework. I've rewritten it so many times and experimented with it so many times.
> I am a complete novice in both, but Haskell practically forces you to separate your IO from the rest of your logic which is an interesting thing to tackle as a technical challenge.
> You are correct. Haskell is more pure, but that's why I said pure-ish. It is interesting the stricter mode Haskell pushes you to. If it's worth it is debatable