Library
Module
Module type
Parameter
Class
Class type
Functions for working with computations which may fail.
A Result
is used to represent a computation which may fail.
A Result
is a variant, which has a constructor for successful results (Ok 'ok)
, and one for unsuccessful results ((Error 'error)
).
type ('ok, 'error) t =
| Ok of 'ok
| Error of 'error
Here is how you would annotate a Result
variable whose Ok
variant is an integer and whose Error
variant is a string:
let ok: (int, string) Result.t = Ok 3
let error: (int, string) Result.t = Error "This computation failed!"
Note The 'error
case can be of any type and while string
is very common you could also use:
string List.t
to allow errors to be accumulatedexn
, in which case the result type just makes exceptions explicit in the return typeIf the function you are writing can only fail in a single obvious way, maybe you want an Option
instead.
type ('ok, 'error) t = ('ok, 'error) result
val ok : 'ok -> ('ok, 'error) t
val error : 'error -> ('ok, 'error) t
A function alternative to the Error
constructor which can be used in places where the constructor isn't permitted such as at the of a Fun.pipe
or functions like List.map
.
Note
When targetting the Bucklescript compiler you can use constructors with the fast pipe.
5 |. Ok = (Ok 5)
See the Reason docs for more.
Examples
Int.negate 3 |> Result.error 3 = Error (-3)
List.map [1; 2; 3] ~f:Result.error = [Error 1; Error 2; Error 3]
val attempt : (unit -> 'ok) -> ('ok, exn) t
Run the provided function and wrap the returned value in a Result
, catching any exceptions raised.
Examples
Result.attempt (fun () -> 5 / 0) = Error Division_by_zero
let numbers = [|1,2,3|] in
Result.attempt (fun () -> numbers.(3)) =
Error (Invalid_argument "index out of bounds")
val fromOption : 'ok option -> error:'error -> ('ok, 'error) t
val from_option : 'ok option -> error:'error -> ('ok, 'error) t
val isOk : (_, _) t -> bool
Check if a Result
is an Ok
.
Useful when you want to perform some side affect based on the presence of an Ok
like logging.
Note if you need access to the contained value rather than doing Result.isOk
followed by Result.unwrapUnsafe
its safer and just as convenient to use pattern matching directly or use one of Result.andThen
or Result.map
Examples
Result.isOk (Ok 3) = true
Result.isOk (Error 3) = false
val is_ok : (_, _) t -> bool
val isError : (_, _) t -> bool
Check if a Result
is an Error
.
Useful when you want to perform some side affect based on the presence of an Error
like logging.
Note if you need access to the contained value rather than doing Result.isOk
followed by Result.unwrapUnsafe
its safer and just as convenient to use pattern matching directly or use one of Result.andThen
or Result.map
Examples
Result.isError (Ok 3) = false
Result.isError (Error 3) = true
val is_error : (_, _) t -> bool
Returns the first argument if it isError
, otherwise return the second argument.
Unlike the Bool.(&&)
operator, the and_
function does not short-circuit. When you call and_
, both arguments are evaluated before being passed to the function.
Examples
Result.and_ (Ok "Antelope") (Ok "Salmon") = Ok "Salmon"
Result.and_
(Error (`UnexpectedBird "Finch"))
(Ok "Salmon")
= Error (`UnexpectedBird "Finch")
Result.and_
(Ok "Antelope")
(Error (`UnexpectedBird "Finch"))
= Error (`UnexpectedBird "Finch")
Result.and_
(Error (`UnexpectedInvertabrate "Honey bee"))
(Error (`UnexpectedBird "Finch"))
= Error (`UnexpectedBird "Honey Bee")
Return the first argument if it isOk
, otherwise return the second.
Unlike the built in ||
operator, the or_
function does not short-circuit. When you call or_
, both arguments are evaluated before being passed to the function.
Examples
Result.or_ (Ok "Boar") (Ok "Gecko") = (Ok "Boar")
Result.or_ (Error (`UnexpectedInvertabrate "Periwinkle")) (Ok "Gecko") = (Ok "Gecko")
Result.or_ (Ok "Boar") (Error (`UnexpectedInvertabrate "Periwinkle")) = (Ok "Boar")
Result.or_ (Error (`UnexpectedInvertabrate "Periwinkle")) (Error (`UnexpectedBird "Robin")) = (Error (`UnexpectedBird "Robin"))
Return the second argument if it isOk
, otherwise return the first.
Like or_
but in reverse. Useful when using the |>
operator
Examples
Result.orElse (Ok "Boar") (Ok "Gecko") = (Ok "Gecko")
Result.orElse (Error (`UnexpectedInvertabrate "Periwinkle")) (Ok "Gecko") = (Ok "Gecko")
Result.orElse (Ok "Boar") (Error (`UnexpectedInvertabrate "Periwinkle")) = (Ok "Boar")
Result.orElse (Error (`UnexpectedInvertabrate "Periwinkle")) (Error (`UnexpectedBird "Robin")) = (Error (`UnexpectedInvertabrate "Periwinkle"))
Combine two results, if both are Ok
returns an Ok
containing a Tuple
of the values.
If either is an Error
, returns the Error
.
The same as writing Result.map2 ~f:Tuple.make
Examples
Result.both (Ok "Badger") (Ok "Rhino") = Ok ("Dog", "Rhino")
Result.both (Error (`UnexpectedBird "Flamingo")) (Ok "Rhino") =
(Error (`UnexpectedBird "Flamingo"))
Result.both
(Ok "Badger")
(Error (`UnexpectedInvertabrate "Blue ringed octopus")) =
(Error (`UnexpectedInvertabrate "Blue ringed octopus"))
Result.both
(Error (`UnexpectedBird "Flamingo"))
(Error (`UnexpectedInvertabrate "Blue ringed octopus")) =
(Error (`UnexpectedBird "Flamingo"))
Collapse a nested result, removing one layer of nesting.
Examples
Result.flatten (Ok (Ok 2)) = Ok 2
Result.flatten (Ok (Error (`UnexpectedBird "Peregrin falcon"))) =
(Error (`UnexpectedBird "Peregrin falcon"))
Result.flatten (Error (`UnexpectedInvertabrate "Woodlouse")) =
(Error (`UnexpectedInvertabrate "Woodlouse"))
val unwrap : ('ok, 'error) t -> default:'ok -> 'ok
Unwrap a Result using the ~default
value in case of an Error
Examples
Result.unwrap ~default:0 (Ok 12) = 12
Result.unwrap ~default:0 ((Error (`UnexpectedBird "Ostrich"))) = 0
Unwrap a Result using the Lazy.force default
value in case of an Error
Examples
Result.unwrap ~default:(lazy 0) (Ok 12) = 12
Result.unwrap ~default:(lazy 0) ((Error (`UnexpectedBird "Ostrich"))) = 0
val unwrapUnsafe : ('ok, _) t -> 'ok
Unwrap a Result, raising an exception in case of an Error
Exceptions
Raises an Invalid_argument "Result.unwrapUnsafe called with an Error"
exception.
Examples
Result.unwrapUnsafe (Ok 12) = 12
Result.unwrapUnsafe (Error "bad")
val unwrap_unsafe : ('ok, _) t -> 'ok
val unwrapError : ('ok, 'error) t -> default:'error -> 'error
Like Result.unwrap
but unwraps an Error
value instead
Examples
Result.unwrapError
(Error (`UnexpectedBird "Swallow"))
~default:(`UnexpectedInvertabrate "Ladybird") =
`UnexpectedBird "Swallow"
Result.unwrapError
(Ok 5)
~default:(`UnexpectedInvertabrate "Ladybird") =
`UnexpectedInvertabrate "Ladybird"
val unwrap_error : ('ok, 'error) t -> default:'error -> 'error
Combine two results
If one of the results is an Error
, that becomes the return result.
If both are Error
values, returns its first.
Examples
Result.map2 (Ok 7) (Ok 3) ~f:Int.add = Ok 10
Result.map2 (Error "A") (Ok 3) ~f:Int.add = Error "A"
Result.map2 (Ok 7) (Error "B") ~f:Int.add = Error "B"
Result.map2 (Error "A") (Error "B") ~f:Int.add = Error "A"
If all of the elements of a list are Ok
, returns an Ok
of the the list of unwrapped values.
If any of the elements are an Error
, the first one encountered is returned.
Examples
Result.values [Ok 1; Ok 2; Ok 3; Ok 4] = Ok [1; 2; 3; 4]
Result.values [Ok 1; Error "two"; Ok 3; Error "four"] = Error "two"
Result.combine results
takes a list of Result
values. If all the elements in results
are of the form Ok x
, then Result.combine
creates a list xs
of all the values extracted from their Ok
s, and returns Ok xs
If any of the elements in results
are of the form Error err
, the first of them is returned as the result of Result.combine
.
Result.combine [Ok 1; Ok 2; Ok 3; Ok 4] = Ok [1; 2; 3; 4]
Result.combine [Ok 1; Error "two"; Ok 3; Error "four"] = Error "two"
Transforms the 'ok
in a result using f
. Leaves the 'error
untouched.
Examples
Result.map (Ok 3) ~f:(Int.add 1) = Ok 9
Result.map (Error "three") ~f:(Int.add 1) = Error "three"
Transforms the value in an Error
using f
. Leaves an Ok
untouched.
Examples
Result.mapError (Ok 3) ~f:String.reverse = Ok 3
Result.mapError (Error "bad") ~f:(Int.add 1) = Error "bad"
Run a function which may fail on a result.
Short-circuits of called with an Error
.
Examples
let reciprical (x:float) : (string, float) Standard.Result.t = (
if (x = 0.0) then
Error "Divide by zero"
else
Ok (1.0 /. x)
)
let root (x:float) : (string, float) Standard.Result.t = (
if (x < 0.0) then
Error "Cannot be negative"
else
Ok (Float.squareRoot x)
)
Examples
Result.andThen ~f:reciprical (Ok 4.0) = Ok 0.25
Result.andThen ~f:reciprical (Error "Missing number!") = Error "Missing number!"
Result.andThen ~f:reciprical (Ok 0.0) = Error "Divide by zero"
Result.andThen (Ok 4.0) ~f:root |> Result.andThen ~f:reciprical = Ok 0.5
Result.andThen (Ok -2.0) ~f:root |> Result.andThen ~f:reciprical = Error "Cannot be negative"
Result.andThen (Ok 0.0) ~f:root |> Result.andThen ~f:reciprical = Error "Divide by zero"
val tap : ('ok, _) t -> f:('ok -> unit) -> unit
Run a function against an (Ok value)
, ignores Error
s.
Examples
Result.tap (Ok "Dog") ~f:print_endline
(* prints "Dog" *)
val toOption : ('ok, _) t -> 'ok option
val to_option : ('ok, _) t -> 'ok option
val equal :
('ok -> 'ok -> bool) ->
('error -> 'error -> bool) ->
('ok, 'error) t ->
('ok, 'error) t ->
bool
Test two results for equality using the provided functions.
Examples
Result.equal String.equal Int.equal (Ok 3) (Ok 3) = true
Result.equal String.equal Int.equal (Ok 3) (Ok 4) = false
Result.equal String.equal Int.equal (Error "Fail") (Error "Fail") = true
Result.equal String.equal Int.equal (Error "Expected error") (Error "Unexpected error") = false
Result.equal String.equal Int.equal (Error "Fail") (Ok 4) = false
val compare :
('ok -> 'ok -> int) ->
('error -> 'error -> int) ->
('ok, 'error) t ->
('ok, 'error) t ->
int
Compare results for using the provided functions.
In the case when one of the results is an Error
and one is Ok
, Error
s are considered 'less' then Ok
s
Examples
Result.compare String.compare Int.compare (Ok 3) (Ok 3) = 0
Result.compare String.compare Int.compare (Ok 3) (Ok 4) = -1
Result.compare String.compare Int.compare (Error "Fail") (Error "Fail") = 0
Result.compare String.compare Int.compare (Error "Fail") (Ok 4) = -1
Result.compare String.compare Int.compare (Ok 4) (Error "Fail") = 1
Result.compare String.compare Int.compare (Error "Expected error") (Error "Unexpected error") = -1
In functions that make heavy use of Result
s operators can make code significantly more concise at the expense of placing a greater cognitive burden on future readers.
val (|?) : ('a, 'error) t -> 'a -> 'a
An operator version of Result.unwrap
where the default
value goes to the right of the operator.
Examples
The following eamples assume open Result.Infix
is in scope.
Ok 4 |? 8 = 4
Error "Missing number!" |? 8 = 8
An operator version of andThen
Examples
The following examples assume
open Result.Infix
let reciprical (x:float) : (string, float) Standard.Result.t =
if (x = 0.0) then
Error "Divide by zero"
else
Ok (1.0 /. x)
Is in scope.
Ok 4. >>= reciprical = Ok 0.25
Error "Missing number!" >>= reciprical = Error "Missing number!"
Ok 0. >>= reciprical = Error "Divide by zero"
An operator version of map
Examples
The following examples assume open Result.Infix
is in scope.
Ok 4 >>| Int.add(1) = Ok 5
Error "Its gone bad" >>| Int.add(1) = Error "Its gone bad"
val pp :
(Format.formatter -> 'ok -> unit) ->
(Format.formatter -> 'error -> unit) ->
Format.formatter ->
('ok, 'error) t ->
unit
Result.pp errFormat okFormat destFormat result
"pretty-prints" the result
, using errFormat
if the result
is an Error
value or okFormat
if the result
is an Ok
value. destFormat
is a formatter that tells where to send the output.
let good: (int, string) Result.t = Ok 42 in
let not_good: (int, string) Tablecloth.Result.t = Error "bad" in
Result.pp Format.pp_print_int Format.pp_print_string Format.std_formatter good;
Result.pp Format.pp_print_int Format.pp_print_string Format.std_formatter not_good;
Format.pp_print_newline Format.std_formatter ();
(* prints <ok: 42><error: bad>*)