6

I am using the Language-Ext library for C# and I am trying to chain asynchronous operations that return an Either type. Let's say that I have three functions that would return an integer if they succeed and a string if the fail, and another function that sums the result of the previous three functions. In the sample implementations below Op3 fails and returns a string.

public static async Task<Either<string, int>> Op1()
{
    return await Task.FromResult(1);
}

public static async Task<Either<string, int>> Op2()
{
    return await Task.FromResult(2);
}

public static async Task<Either<string, int>> Op3()
{
    return await Task.FromResult("error");
}

public static async Task<Either<string, int>> Calculate(int x, int y, int z)
{
    return await Task.FromResult(x + y + z);
}

I want to chain these operations and I am trying to do it like this:

var res = await (from x in Op1()
                 from y in Op2()
                 from z in Op3()
                 from w in Calculate(x, y, z)
                 select w);

But we the code does not compile because I get the error cannot convert from 'LanguageExt.Either<string, int>' to 'int' for the arguments of Calculate. How should I chain these functions?

2
  • Your Op2 and Op3 method accept arguments, but none of them is provided with any ? Is this a copy paste error or the actual problem of your code. Locally i've tested your code and it builds successfully after i've supplied Op2 and Op3 with arguments. Feb 19, 2018 at 16:40
  • That was a typo, indeed. The problem arises when Op2 and Op3 do not have the arguments. Feb 19, 2018 at 19:30

2 Answers 2

5

The problem is that the LINQ query can't work out which version of SelectMany to use, because x isn't used in the second line. You can get around this by converting your Task<Either<L, R>> to EitherAsync<L, R>:

    public static async Task<int> M()
    {
        var res = from x in Op1().ToAsync()
                  from y in Op2().ToAsync()
                  from z in Op3().ToAsync()
                  from w in Calculate(x, y, z).ToAsync()
                  select w;

        return await res.IfLeft(0);
    }

Or, instead of returning Task<Either<L, R>> return EitherAsync<L, R>:

    public static EitherAsync<string, int> Op1() =>
        1;

    public static EitherAsync<string, int> Op2() =>
        2;

    public static EitherAsync<string, int> Op3() =>
        3;

    public static EitherAsync<string, int> Calculate(int x, int y, int z) =>
        x + y + z;

    public static async Task<int> M()
    {
        var res = from x in Op1()
                  from y in Op2()
                  from z in Op3()
                  from w in Calculate(x, y, z)
                  select w;

        return await res.IfLeft(0);
    }
0

x, y and z are not of type int, but of Either<string, int> change Calculate(int x, int y, int z) to accept instances of Either calls: Calculate(Either<string, int> x, Either<string, int> y, Either<string, int>z), or pass

x.{The int getter property}
6
  • I think that's not the problem. If I turn all the functions synchronous (removing all the Task, async, await), then the type is correctly inferred and if I run it the computation is aborted when Op3 returns the string (as expected). All the values are correctly unwrapped from the monad in this case. I suspect that the problem has something to do with the fact that Either is wrapped in a Task, but I am not getting it to work. Feb 19, 2018 at 13:23
  • @Radin is correct. The from .. in syntax only unwraps one monadic type. That is why the synchronous version of your code works...because you are manually removing the Task<> monad and the from..in syntax unwraps the Either<string, int> to int. I see two solutions. You can nest calls to MapT (which unwraps two monadic types at once) or you can upgrade to the current prerelease version and replace the nested monad types Task<Either<,>> with the single monad type EitherAsync<,>. Feb 20, 2018 at 2:14
  • @TysonWilliams I think I see how it could work using MapT, but I do not see it working with EitherAsync<,>. If I replace async Task<Either<,> in the signature of my functions with EitherAsync<,> then I cannot await tasks inside the methods. I can return a task, but I cannot await. Am I missing something? (PS: I have tried the pre-release version of the library). Feb 20, 2018 at 14:40
  • Don't change how you are using async and await. Feb 20, 2018 at 14:46
  • 2
    If I keep async and await then the compiler warns me that The return type of an async method must be void, Task, Task<T>, ValueTask<T> or another tasklike type. I am using the version 2.2.11-beta. Feb 20, 2018 at 14:57

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