A friendly programming language from the future.

  • Yes, in functional programming you want to use pure functions. Exceptions are impure, therefore it has to be declared.

    Other functional languages don’t even have exceptions

    • @robinm@programming.dev
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      11 year ago

      I’m surprised about this statement, I would have said that exceptions are the consequence of an impure operation (that may or may not fail differently every time you call it).

      • I’m currently learning functional languages and have only limited knowledge, but from what I’ve read now you are right. Throwing exceptions is pure, but catching them is impure.

        In this case I guess the printLine function can throw an exception therefore the calling function must be declared with Exception?

        • @robinm@programming.dev
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          21 year ago

          I would even have said that both throwing and catching should be pure, just like returning an error value/handling should be pure, but the reason for the throw/returning error itself is impure. Like if you throw and ioerror it’s only after doing the impure io call, and the rest of the error reporting/handling itself can be pure.

          • @Pipoca@lemmy.world
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            11 year ago

            Pure functions should be referentially transparent; you should be able to replace them with whatever value they evaluate to without changing the semantics of your code.

            Throwing is referentially impure: what value do you get from calling x => throw new RuntimeException()?

            Instead, functional languages prefer to return a tagged union of the value or the error.