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User-defined control structures

Haskell has no shorthand ternary operator. The built-in if-then-else is always ternary, and is an expression (imperative languages tend to have ?:=expression, if=statement). If you want, though,

True ? x = const x
False ? _ = id

will define (?) to be the ternary operator:

(a ? b $ c)  ==  (if a then b else c)

You'd have to resort to macros in most other languages to define your own short-circuiting logical operators, but Haskell is a fully lazy language, so it just works.

-- prints "I'm alive! :)"
main = True ? putStrLn "I'm alive! :)" $ error "I'm dead :("
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Haskell has no shorthand ternary operator. The built-in if-then-else is always ternary, and is an expression (imperative languages tend to have ?:=expression, if=statement). If you want, though,

True ? x = const x
False ? _ = id

will define (?) to be the ternary operator:

(a ? b $ c)  ==  (if a then b else c)

You'd have to resort to macros in most other languages to define your own short-circuiting logical operators, but Haskell is a fully lazy language, so it just works.

-- prints "I'm alive! :)"
main = True ? putStrLn "I'm alive! :)" $ error "I'm dead :("