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  • Book Overview & Buying Learn Type-Driven Development
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Learn Type-Driven Development

Learn Type-Driven Development

By : Soumya Mukherjee, Amin, Kamon Ayeva
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Learn Type-Driven Development

Learn Type-Driven Development

5 (1)
By: Soumya Mukherjee, Amin, Kamon Ayeva

Overview of this book

Type-driven development is an approach that uses a static type system to achieve results including safety and efficiency. Types are used to express relationships and other assumptions directly in the code, and these assumptions are enforced by the compiler before the code is run. Learn Type-Driven Development covers how to use these type systems to check the logical consistency of your code. This book begins with the basic idea behind type-driven development. You’ll learn about values (or terms) and how they contrast with types. As you progress through the chapters, you’ll cover how to combine types and values inside modules and build structured types out of simpler ones. You’ll then understand how to express choices or alternatives directly in the type system using variants, polymorphic variants, and generalized algebraic data types. You’ll also get to grips with sum types, build sophisticated data types from generics, and explore functions that express change in the types of values. In the concluding chapters, you’ll cover advanced techniques for code reuse, such as parametric polymorphism and subtyping. By end of this book, you will have learned how to iterate through a type-driven process of solving coding problems using static types, together with dynamic behavior, to obtain more safety and speed.
Table of Contents (12 chapters)
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Errors

We mentioned earlier that the compiler will raise errors if it cannot make sense of a piece of code it comes across. There are a few different kinds of compiler errors, and they are as follows

  • Syntax errors
  • Type errors
  • Name errors
  • Stale interface errors (which we'll cover in the next chapter)
  • Compiler bugs (these are rare but shouldn't be discounted)

The two most common types of error that we will deal with are syntax errors and type errors. Name errors are fairly simple to avoid: always start type names with a lowercase letter and ensure that the names you refer to in your code were defined before you refer to them. (Reason supports cyclic references but not forward references; we'll cover cyclic references later on.)

Syntax errors

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