Colin Paul Adams wrote:
"Cale" == Cale Gibbard <[EMAIL PROTECTED]> writes:

    Cale> So, the first version:

    Cale> import System.IO import Control.Exception (try)

    Cale> main = do mfh <- try (openFile "myFile" ReadMode) case mfh
    Cale> of Left err -> do putStr "Error opening file for reading: "
    Cale> print err Right fh -> do mline <- try (hGetLine fh) case
    Cale> mline of Left err -> do putStr "Error reading line: " print
    Cale> err hClose fh Right line -> putStrLn ("Read: " ++ line)

Left? Right?

Hardly descriptive terms. Sounds like a sinister language to me.

I was thinking along the same lines. Politically-sensitive left-handed people everywhere ought to be offended that "Left" is the alternative used to represent errors, mnemonic value notwithstanding.

Is there a benefit to reusing a generic Either type for this sort of thing? For code comprehensibility, wouldn't it be better to use more specific names? If I want car and cdr, I know where to find it.

Anton

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