Yes, and yes :)

For example:

import Data.Char 

main = do
  let prompt s = do
      putStrLn s
      getLine
  firstName <- prompt "What's your first name?"
  lastName <- prompt "What's your last name?"
  let bigFirstName = map toUpper firstName 
      bigLastName = map toUpper lastName 
  putStrLn $ "hey " ++ bigFirstName ++ " " ++ bigLastName ++ ", how are you?"

- Job

On Tue, Aug 10, 2010 at 12:40 PM, michael rice <nowgate@yahoo.com> wrote:

From: Learn You a Haskell

===================

Remember let bindings? If you don't, refresh your memory on them by reading this section. They have to be in the form of let bindings in expression, where bindings are names to be given to expressions and expression is the expression that is to be evaluated that sees them. We also said that in list comprehensions, the in part isn't needed. Well, you can use them in do blocks pretty much like you use them in list comprehensions. Check this out:


  import Data.Char  
     
    main = do  
      putStrLn "What's your first name?"  
      firstName <- getLine  
      putStrLn "What's your last name?"  
      lastName <- getLine  
      let bigFirstName = map toUpper firstName  
          bigLastName = map toUpper lastName  
      putStrLn $ "hey " ++ bigFirstName ++ " " ++ bigLastName ++ ", how are you?"

===================

Questions:

1) Is there an implicit *in* before the last line above?

2) Within a do "in" the IO monad (or any other monad), can a *let* do something like this?

      let x = do   -- in a different monad


Michael



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