Try `Control.Monad.void`. It is equivalent of adding `>> return ()` to the end of a block.

void $ do
 ...

On 9 June 2015 at 20:55, Vale Cofer-Shabica <vale.cofershabica@gmail.com> wrote:
Dear all,

I'm writing a command line program which may need to exit early based
on some condition. Because of the pipeline the program is a part of, I
want to be able to control the exit status when it does terminate. I
can successfully use 'error' to indicate failure, but also want to
exit early with success (or any other status). Here's what I've
managed:

>import System.Exit (exitSuccess)
>import Control.Monad (when)

>main = do

... code to reasonably initialize condition, e.g.:

>  let condition = True
>  when condition (putStrLn "Bailing out.")>>exitSuccess>>(return ())

... program continues

If I remove ">>(return ())" my code will not typecheck because
"exitSuccess :: IO a". But this looks ugly and smells sufficiently
like a kludge that I presume there is a better way to do it.

Any suggestions appreciated,
vale
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--
Regards

Sumit Sahrawat