Module: Fear::ForApi

Included in:
Fear
Defined in:
lib/fear/for_api.rb

Instance Method Summary collapse

Instance Method Details

#for(*monads, &block) ⇒ {#map, #flat_map}

Syntactic sugar for composition of multiple monadic operations. It supports two such operations - flat_map and map. Any class providing them is supported by Fear.or.

Fear.for(Fear.some(2), Fear.some(3)) do |a, b|
  a * b
end #=> Fear.some(6)

If one of operands is None, the result is None

Fear.for(Fear.some(2), Fear.none()) { |a, b| a * b } #=> Fear.none()
Fear.for(Fear.none(), Fear.some(2)) { |a, b| a * b } #=> Fear.none()

Lets look at first example:

Fear.for(Fear.some(2), Fear.some(3)) { |a, b| a * b }

it is translated to:

Fear.some(2).flat_map do |a|
  Fear.some(3).map do |b|
    a * b
  end
end

It works with arrays as well

Fear.for([1, 2], [2, 3], [3, 4]) { |a, b, c| a * b * c }
  #=> [6, 8, 9, 12, 12, 16, 18, 24]

it is translated to:

[1, 2].flat_map do |a|
  [2, 3].flat_map do |b|
    [3, 4].map do |c|
      a * b * c
    end
  end
end

If you pass lambda instead of monad, it would be evaluated only on demand.

Fear.for(proc { Fear.none() }, proc { raise 'kaboom' } ) do |a, b|
  a * b
end #=> Fear.none()

It does not fail since ‘b` is not evaluated. You can refer to previously defined monads from within lambdas.

maybe_user = find_user('Paul') #=> <#Option value=<#User ...>>

Fear.for(maybe_user, ->(user) { user.birthday }) do |user, birthday|
  "#{user.name} was born on #{birthday}"
end #=> Fear.some('Paul was born on 1987-06-17')

Parameters:

  • monads ({#map, #flat_map})

Returns:

  • ({#map, #flat_map})


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# File 'lib/fear/for_api.rb', line 66

def for(*monads, &block)
  Fear::For.(monads, &block)
end