On Sat, 22 Nov 2008, Thomas Schilling wrote:

It's a pattern match error, implemented by throwing an asynchronous
exception.  The idea being, that we only have one mechanism (well, an
synchronous exceptions, thrown via throwIO).

Yes, I know that there's a difference between "error" and "exception",
but I would argue that which is which depends on the program.  For
example, for most programs a pattern match error is a fatal condition,
there's no sane recovery from it.  OTOH, in a program like GHCi, a
pattern match error in an executed statement is an exceptional
condition, which we want to catch, so it doesn't kill GHCi.

It's completely ok to run something in a sandbox and try to observe errors. But that's debugging and I think there is no need to do this in many places of an application. In general handling errors automatically is not possible, because an error might also be if a program loops infinitely. Thus one should not generally handle an error like an exception.
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