I have read a blog post about Reader
monad.
The post is truly great and explains the topic in details but I did not get why I should use the Reader
monad in that case.
The post says: Suppose there is a function query: String => Connection => ResultSet
def query(sql:String) = conn:Connection => conn.createStatement.executeQuery(sql)
We can run a few queries as follows:
def doSomeQueries(conn: Connection) = { val rs1 = query("SELECT COUNT(*) FROM Foo")(conn) val rs2 = query("SELECT COUNT(*) FROM Bar")(conn) rs1.getInt(1) + rs2.getInt(1) }
So far so good, but the post suggests use the Reader
monad instead:
class Reader[E, A](run: E => A) { def map[B](f: A => B):Reader[E, B] = new Reader(е=> f(run(е))) def flatMap[B](f:A => Reader[E, B]): Reader[E, B] = new Reader(е => f(run(е)).run(е)) } val query(sql:String): Reader[Connection, ResultSet] = new Reader(conn => conn.createStatement.executeQuery(sql)) def doSomeQueries(conn: Connection) = for { rs1 <- query("SELECT COUNT(*) FROM Foo") rs2 <- query("SELECT COUNT(*) FROM Bar") } yield rs1.getInt(1) + rs2.getInt(1)
Ok, I got that I don't need to thread connection
through the calls explicitly. So what ?
Why the solution with Reader
monad is better than the previous one ?
UPDATE: Fixed the typo in def query: = should be => This comment only exists because SO insists that edits must be at least 6 chars long. So here we go.
scalaz
tag, and it's worth noting that your second example isn't self-contained—you'd needmap
andflatMap
onReader
to use it in thefor
-comprehension.