Why does Clojure, despite such an emphasis on functional paradigm, not use the Maybe/ Option monad to represent optional values? The use of Option is quite pervasive in Scala, a functional programming language I use regularly.
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Clojure is not statically typed, so doesn't need the strict this/that/whatever type declarations that are necessary in haskell (and, I gather, Scala). If you want to return a string, you return a string; if you return nil instead, that's okay too. "Functional" does not correspond exactly to "strict compile-time typing". They are orthogonal concepts, and Clojure chooses dynamic typing. In fact, for quite some time I couldn't imagine how you could implement many of the higher-order functions like | |||||||||||||||||
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Maybe/Option is a type. It has nothing to do with functional programming. Yes, some languages (Scala, haskell, ocaml) besides being functional also provide a very powerful type system. People even say about haskell that it is a programming WITH TYPES. Others (clojure, lisp) do not provide much in terms of types even though they are fully capable functional languages. Their emphasis is different, and Maybe/Option type does not fit in. It simply does not give you much in dynamic language. For example many clojure functions operating on sequences (lists, vectors, maps) will perfectly accept null (nil) and treat it as empty structure. (count nil) will give you 0. Just like (count []) Clojure cannot be called a "programming with types" and thus Maybe type does not make much sense in it. | |||
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Well there is a Maybe monad but it uses nil as Nothing, capturing only the abstraction of computation (if input=nil return nil else calc whatever with input)to avoid null pointers errors but it doesnt have the static compile-time safety. There is fnil too that have a similar mission, patching nil with default values and a -?>. I think the clojure way is more oriented to return default values that raise errors or nil. | |||
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Going with @amalloy and comments that Clojure, as a language, doesn't have a need for an optional return value. I haven't done much with Scala, but Clojure doesn't need to know the strict details about the return type to be able to work with a value. It's almost as if a Maybe monad was embedded and made a part of normal Clojure evaluation, as many of the operations, if performed on I took a quick look at the Clojure-Contrib library, and they have a monad package which you may want to look at. Another item which really clued me into how one would make use of Monads in Clojure, is Cosmin's tutorial on Monads in Clojure. It was this that help me connect how the functionality that is stated more explicitly in Scala is handled as part of the dynamic Clojure language. | |||
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