Book Image

Haskell Cookbook

Book Image

Haskell Cookbook

Overview of this book

Haskell is a purely functional language that has the great ability to develop large and difficult, but easily maintainable software. Haskell Cookbook provides recipes that start by illustrating the principles of functional programming in Haskell, and then gradually build up your expertise in creating industrial-strength programs to accomplish any goal. The book covers topics such as Functors, Applicatives, Monads, and Transformers. You will learn various ways to handle state in your application and explore advanced topics such as Generalized Algebraic Data Types, higher kind types, existential types, and type families. The book will discuss the association of lenses with type classes such as Functor, Foldable, and Traversable to help you manage deep data structures. With the help of the wide selection of examples in this book, you will be able to upgrade your Haskell programming skills and develop scalable software idiomatically.
Table of Contents (13 chapters)

Working with IO monad

In the recipes that we saw earlier, we all worked with IO, and used functions such as putStrLn :: String -> IO () or print :: Show a => a -> IO (). We already know that these functions print the string or a value to standard output.

In this recipe, we will open a file, read it line by line, and output it on the stdout along with the line number. We will also understand how IO works as a monad and how IO allows a Haskell program to interact with the outside world.

How to do it...

  1. Create a new project io-monad with the simple Stack template:
        stack new io-monad simple
  1. Open src/Main.hs; we will be editing this file.
  1. After initial module definition, add the following imports. Only those...