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My understanding is the following:

Suppose M1 and M2 are monads, i.e. they provide functions unit and flatMap that comply to the monadic laws. Unfortunately we cannot create unit and flatMap for M1[M2] . It looks like the unit and flatMap don't always exist for any M1 and M2. I do not know if we need to prove it.

So the solution is to create a wrapper W for M1[M2], so that W[M1, M2] is a monad, and use it instead. This wrapper W is called Monad Transformer.

Do I understand it correctly ?

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  • Quick hand-wavy answer: monads don't compose in the general case, but sometimes specific monads do, and monad transformers provide a way to make that composition happen. Note that a monad transformer is not itself a monad—your summary is potentially ambiguous on this point. Mar 12, 2014 at 12:52
  • @TravisBrown Thanks. I was sure a monad transformer was itself a monad. Is ListT a monad, for example ? It seems to provide both unit and flatMap.
    – Michael
    Mar 12, 2014 at 12:56
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    ListT is a monad once it's been applied to a monad, so ListT[Option, _] is a monad (morally—that's of course not valid Scala syntax). Mar 12, 2014 at 13:08
  • @TravisBrown Thanks. Now I got it. (I will fix the question)
    – Michael
    Mar 12, 2014 at 13:09

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You are right. Typically they are used in for-comprehension constructions where you need to combine monads properties.

Monad transformers "step-by-step" here.

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  • Thank you. I know your presentation. It's really great. I still didn't get it but I will try (and ask questions here).
    – Michael
    Mar 12, 2014 at 12:18

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