good pattern matching, combining both the Right and the pair matching.. I didn't realize I can do both at once :-)

I'll use this, thank you!

Emmanuel


On Fri, Dec 14, 2012 at 6:25 PM, Daniel Fischer <daniel.is.fischer@googlemail.com> wrote:
On Freitag, 14. Dezember 2012, 16:19:02, Emmanuel Touzery wrote:
> I see... However it uses Either and returns a pair, unlike "read". It's
> a plus for reliability but an annoyance in my case. In my case I know
> positively it's a number.
> In this case I did a filter isDigit, but this will happen also if I
> match using a regular expression and [0-9] or \d.
>
> In the end the most terse way to code it is to go through unpack then it
> seems.
> Using Data.Text.Read all I see is:
>
> fst $ right $ decimal t
> where right (Right a) = a
>
> so I'll probably do:
>
> read $ unpack t
>
> and be done with it...

Note that unpacking to String and then reading from the String is not the most
efficient way.

For the cases you are sure to have a valid input Text and no leftovers (you
are interested in), you can define

it'sSafeIPromise :: Reader a -> Text -> a
it'sSafeIPromise = (value .)
  where
    value (Right (v,_)) = v

and use

readInt :: Text -> Int
readInt = it'sSafeIPromise decimal

If you use it a lot, it's worth the bit of additional typing.

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