I want to update a record in Elm of type
type CubeData = {currDirection : Vec3, translation : Vec3, transform : Mat4}
Which I can use the following code to do.
updateCubeData : CubeData -> CubeData
updateCubeData cubeData = {cubeData | translation <- cubeData.currDirection,
transform <- translate cubeData.translation cubeData.transform}
However, I now want to update a field of the record differently depending on what the current value of the field is, so I tried doing this
updateCubeData : CubeData -> CubeData
updateCubeData cubeData = if abs cubeData.translation.x > 2.0 || abs cubeData.translation.y > 2.0
then {cubeData | translation <- cubeData.currDirection,
transform <- translate cubeData.translation cubeData.transform}
else {cubeData | currDirection <- negate cubeData.currDirection,
translation <- cubeData.currDirection,
transform <- translate cubeData.translation cubeData.transform}
This is a type error, which I've reproduced below. Note the type signature of updateCubeData
is the 12th line of the file.
Type error on line 15, column 68 to 76:
cubeData
Expected Type: {a | y : Float, x : Float}
Actual Type: Vec3
Type error on line 18, column 68 to 76:
cubeData
Expected Type: {a | y : Float, x : Float}
Actual Type: Vec3
Type error between lines 13 and 18:
if | ((abs cubeData.translation.x) > 2.0) ||
((abs cubeData.translation.y) > 2.0) ->
{cubeData |
translation <- cubeData.currDirection,
transform <- translate cubeData.translation cubeData.transform}
| True ->
{cubeData |
currDirection <- negate cubeData.currDirection,
translation <- cubeData.currDirection,
transform <- translate cubeData.translation cubeData.transform}
Expected Type: Vec3
Actual Type: {a | y : Float, x : Float}
If I eliminate the if
statement, and just set the function equal to the contents of the then
and else
the code compiles and runs as expected (if that block was the whole method). Why does adding an if statement as I have here introduce this type error, and how can I fix it?