My prolog teacher asked us that and nobody could give a solid answer, and I couldn't find an answer online.
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neither is an expression or syntactically-valid on its own, so you should tell the prof that the question is ill-stated– jberrymanSep 10, 2014 at 22:23
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@jberryman: actually I suspect the prof stated the question rather more healthily than what the OP posted here...– leftaroundaboutSep 10, 2014 at 22:26
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He actually put the question in a test, its in Spanish but here it is its the question 3https://www.dropbox.com/s/j9cqo8b2s2ioyfa/Tarea%25201.pdf?dl=0– Jorge AcevedoSep 10, 2014 at 22:31
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...then flip your desk and storm out– jberrymanSep 10, 2014 at 22:46
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Haha best advice ever– Jorge AcevedoSep 10, 2014 at 23:23
2 Answers
Reading your dropbox link, it appears that the missing context to your question is this: your professor is assuming that you're running inside GHCi, the Haskell interpreter, which works a bit different from the compiler.
The question, translated to English, goes like this:
Function definition
In Haskell functions are defined with the reserved word
let
let x = 10
Another way to define a function is as follows:
x <- return 10
What's the difference, and what are the tradeoffs of each approach?
The first thing that's confusing the other people commenting in these questions is that neither of these is a valid expression in a Haskell source file, but both are valid statements in a do
block (see leftaroundabout's answer), and because of this they're also valid input at the GHCi prompt:
GHCi, version 7.6.3: http://www.haskell.org/ghc/ :? for help
Loading package ghc-prim ... linking ... done.
Loading package integer-gmp ... linking ... done.
Loading package base ... linking ... done.
Prelude> x <- return 10
Prelude> x
10
Prelude> let y = 10
Prelude> y
10
The second thing that's confusing is that neither of these examples is defining a function; they're binding a value to a variable. let
can be used to define functions, but as far as I know <-
cannot. It sounds to me like your teacher is mixing up the terms "function" and "variable."
In any case:
- The
let x = 10
syntax bindsx
to a pure value; - The
x <- return 10
bindsx
to the result of an action.
So you can do the following with variable <- action
, but not with let variable = expression
. (Note the second line is input that I typed in.)
Prelude> str <- getLine
La pregunta de tu profesor me parece algo disparatada.
Prelude> str
"La pregunta de tu profesor me parece algo disparatada."
Let's give both some minimial context:
foo, foo' :: IO ()
foo = do
let x = 10
print x
foo' = do
x <- return 10
print x
Both are just syntactic sugar:
foo ≡ (\x -> print x) 10
foo' ≡ return 10 >>= \x -> print x
or, if we call that common lambda p
,
foo ≡ p 10
foo' ≡ return 10 >>= p
Clearly, foo
is much more basic, and preferrable (in particular as it works with any return type of p
, not just monads). However, by the monad laws, both are actually required to be equivalent, for any monad!
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But let bindings are polymorphic (modulo the dreaded monomorphism restriction) and monadic bind is not. So they are no equivalent.– augustssSep 11, 2014 at 0:31
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@augustss: with
ImpredicativeTypes
you can make monadic binds polymorphic as well (though it requires a heck lot of extremely ugly type annotations). Sep 11, 2014 at 0:43 -
ImpredicativeTypes is a crazy complex extension, whereas NoMonomorphismRestriction simplifies the type checker by removing a special case.– augustssSep 11, 2014 at 7:13