
sequence will get the types to match up, but a more elegant solution
would be to get every line into a single string, then print that.
putStrLn $ unlines $ map show newList
I agree that getting the types to line up can be a nuisance, and with
such small programs it doesn't bring much of an advantage. Ultimately,
if you want side-effects to be reflected in the type system, there
will be times you have to do a bit of extra work to satisfy the type
checker. Learning to write well-typed code is much easier in this
context, where everything has a fairly concrete type and there is lots
of documentation, than having to learn it later when you have weird
types coming from 3 different libraries and are facing a problem no
one else has had. I would recommend getting very comfortable with GHCi
and Hoogle.
If you haven't already, add a hoogle prompt to GHCi by pasting something like
:def hoogle \str -> return $ ":! hoogle --count=15 \"" ++ str ++ "\""
in your ghci.conf. This will allow you to easily search for functions
of a given type. Typing
:hoogle [IO a] -> IO [a]
returned all the information needed to answer your question.
On Mon, Mar 9, 2015 at 4:25 PM, Geoffrey Bays
Thanks, Joel.
Putting the type IO [()] in the main declaration and this as the final line of the main function does do the trick:
sequence [putStrLn $ show s | s <- newList]
But this is the kind of thing that makes Haskell types difficult for beginners to work with...
Geoffrey
On Mon, Mar 9, 2015 at 4:15 PM, Joel Williamson
wrote: main must have type IO a. Hoogle tells me that to convert [IO a] -> IO [a], you should use the function sequence. Try applying that to your final line.
On Mon, 9 Mar 2015 16:07 Geoffrey Bays
wrote: My main function looks like this:
main :: [IO()] main = do let stud1 = Student {name = "Geoff", average = -99.0, grades = [66,77,88]} let stud2 = Student {name = "Doug", average = -99.0, grades = [77,88,99]} let stud3 = Student {name = "Ron", average = -99.0, grades = [55,66,77]} let studList = [stud1,stud2] let newList = calcAvg studList [putStrLn $ show s | s <- newList] --putStrLn $ show (newList !! 0) --putStrLn $ show (newList !! 1)
With this final line, putStrLn $ show (newList !! 0), the type IO () in the function declaration compiles fine. But with [putStrLn $ show s | s <- newList] as the final line, [IO ()] in the function declaration will not compile, I get this error:
Couldn't match expected type `IO t0' with actual type `[IO ()]'
What does the declared type need to be for a final line of: [putStrLn $ show s | s <- newList] ???
Thanks,
Geoffrey
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