Why I Prefer Exceptions to Error Values - eviltoast
  • matcha_addict@lemy.lol
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    2 months ago

    Can you please demonstrate how async workflows and monads resolve this issue?

    Wouldn’t effect systems still be considered exceptions, but handled differently?

    • lad@programming.dev
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      2 months ago

      I don’t know the answer to your question, but I think that what is needed is just a bit of syntactic sugar, e.g. Rust has ? for returning compatible errors without looking into them. That seems to be powered by Try trait, that may be a monad, but I am not fluent enough to check if it formally is.

    • baseless_discourse@mander.xyz
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      2 months ago

      In Maybe monadic, its monadic bind will automatically resolves any failed computation, and don’t need explicit checking.

      for example, the code in Haskell looks something like the following:

      fib: Int -> Int -> Maybe Int
      fib max_depth idx =
        do
           guard (0 <= max_depth)
           n1 <- fib (max_depth - 1) (idx - 1)
           n2 <- fib (max_depth - 1) (idx - 2)
           return (n1 + n2)
      

      Haskell type class system automatically figures out this is a maybe monad, and check for error accordingly.

      Notice, unlike the C code the author provide, this haskell code will exit immediately when n1 failed and never compute n2, similar to the behavior of the exception code. Thus I believe his point about performance is at least unjustified, if not wrong.

      Another interesting fact about this code is that there is nothing that is built into the compiler/interpretor (except the do expression, which is just a minor syntactical sugar). For this code, the compiler designers don’t need to design special semantics for raise and catch. Everything here, guard, return, and the Maybe monad (which is in charge of propagating errors) is defined by the user, using normal functions, no metaprogramming involved.

      Wouldn’t effect systems still be considered exceptions, but handled differently?

      Yes, unlike monad, the error in algebraic effect is propagated by the compiler/interpretor, instead of user defined. But unlike implicit effect, explicit effect (algebraic effect, throwable, etc.) makes it clear how the code can go wrong.

      Although explicit error through monad or algebraic effect is more clear in general, there are special cases where explicit effect is undesirable. One such example is effect pollution: low-level effects that are unlikely to cause impure behaviors are unnecessarily propagated through the call stack. This problem can make the code more verbose and difficult to handle.