In F#, use of the the pipe-forward operator (|>) is pretty common. However, in Haskell I've only ever seen function composition (.) being used. I understand that they are related, but is there a language reason that pipe-forward isn't used in Haskell or is it something else
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I am being a little speculative... Culture: I think (|>) is an important operator in the F# "culture", and perhaps similarly with (.) for Haskell. F# has a function composition operator (<<) but I think the F# community tends to use points-free style less than the Haskell community. Language differences: I don't know enough about both languages to compare, but perhaps the rules for generalizing let-bindings are sufficiently different as to affect this. For example, I know in F# sometimes writing
will not compile, and you need explicit eta-conversion:
to make it compile. This also steers people away from points-free/compositional style, and towards the pipelining style. Also, F# type inference sometimes demands pipelining, so that a known type appears on the left (see here). (Personally, I find points-free style unreadable, but I suppose every new/different thing seems unreadable until you become accustomed to it.) I think both are potentially viable in either language, and history/culture/accident may define why each community settled at a different "attractor". |
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In F#
generally won't typecheck, because even if the type of In contrast
will work fine, because the type of The left-to-right typechecking is required because of the name resolution involved in constructs like |
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More speculation, this time from the predominantly Haskell side...
Also, speaking from a bit of F# experience, I think Personally, I like thinking left-to-right too, so I use |
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I have seen
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