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I have a task that requires implementing a looped version of FizzBuzz utilizing command line arguments, comparing 2 divisors to a number, printing Fizz if upBound is divisible by div1, Buzz if upBound is divisible by div2 and the upBound if it isn't divisible by either. I've constructed the function and am able to use that independent of the main function, but in order to compile, I obviously need the main function, which I've tried implementing below

module Main( main ) where
import System.Environment

fizzBuzz div1 div2 upBound = do if (upBound - 1) > 1 
                                then fizzBuzz div1 div2 (upBound - 1)
                                else print "";
                                if mod (upBound - 1) div1 > 0 && mod (upBound - 1) div2 > 0
                                then print (upBound - 1)
                                else
                                    print ((if mod (upBound - 1) div1 == 0 then "Fizz" else []) ++ (if mod (upBound - 1) div2 == 0 then "Buzz" else []))

main = do
    [div1,div2,upBound] <- getArgs
    fizzBuzz div1 div2 upBound

I've scoured every tutorial and help site I can find and I just don't know enough about Haskell and it's syntax to determine exactly what is wrong. Currently I get the following error when attempting to compile:

"fizzbuzz.hs:14:9: No instance for (Integral String) arising from a use of 'fizzBuzz'"

My expected output for an example is something like

fizzbuzz 2 4 6

is

1
Fizz
3
FizzBuzz
5
Fizz

Unfortunately I can't seem to locate the right help resources to figure out how to fix the issue and am hoping someone can point me in the right direction.

Thank you in advance.

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  • 4
    Your fizzBuzz function essentially takes three integer arguments - but getArgs gives you a list of strings. You must convert from string to integer - the quick and dirty way would be fizzBuzz (read a) (read b) (read c). Mar 9, 2016 at 1:37
  • I'm confused by your comment, @Mephy. Don't all of the if expressions have the same type in their then and else, namely IO ()? Which expression doesn't satisfy that constraint?
    – amalloy
    Mar 9, 2016 at 2:14

1 Answer 1

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When you get stuck like this, it's best to look at the types involved:

  • The fizzBuzz function takes 3 numbers and returns an IO () action

  • The getArgs function has type getArgs :: IO [String]

This means that in main, div1 has type String; div2 has type String; and upBound has type String. You are passing them directly to fizzBuzz, but recall it is expecting numeric arguments! This is why you get the error about (Integral String); because numeric arguments can be any one of a class of types, it's telling you it can't find evidence of String being a member of the numeric class it's expecting.

You need to somehow interpret the strings from your command line into numbers. The easiest way to do this is the read method, which has type Read a => String -> a. This means that if the type you would like to parse from the string is a member of the "readable" class of types, it can take a String and give you an instance of that type.

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  • Excellent advice, doing user2407038's suggestion worked, and this was a great explanation!
    – Xiphoen
    Mar 10, 2016 at 5:45

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