4

I feel like I should already know this, but how could I use fromMaybe in one line instead of breaking it into 2 with a let?

main = do
    maybePort <- lookupEnv "PORT"
    let port = fromMaybe "4020" maybePort
    putStrLn $ "Listening on:" ++ port

1 Answer 1

8

you can use fmap or <$> like this:

import Control.Applicative ((<$>))

main = do
    port <- fromMaybe "4020" <$> lookupEnv "PORT"
    putStrLn $ "Listening on:" ++ port
2
  • 1
    You actually don't need fmap or <$> at all in this example code. putStrLn $ "Listening on:" ++ fromMaybe "4020" maybePort works just fine once you've got the lookupEnv call and you can even one-liner it as lookupEnv "PORT" >>= putStrLn . ("Listening on: " ++) . fromMaybe "4020". I guess since it's presumably also used later (for actually binding the port) yours is the correct answer though.
    – CR Drost
    Oct 25, 2014 at 0:20
  • 1
    @ChrisDrost of course there is more than one solution to most problems - this is just the first that came to my mind - why don't you make your comment into another answer? - BTW: IMO <$> is usually rather readable and I would choose it over >>= here, but that's just preferences
    – Random Dev
    Oct 25, 2014 at 7:03

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