3.2.2. effect.do module¶
An imperative-looking notation for Effectful code.
See do().
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effect.do.do(f)¶ A decorator which allows you to use
donotation in your functions, for imperative-looking code:@do def foo(): thing = yield Effect(Constant(1)) yield do_return('the result was %r' % (thing,)) eff = foo() return eff.on(...)
@domust decorate a generator function (not any other type of iterator). Any yielded values must either be Effects or the result of ado_return()call. The result of a yielded Effect will be passed back into the generator as the result of theyieldexpression. Yieldeddo_return()values will provide the ultimate result of the Effect that is returned by the decorated function. Note thatdo_return()is only necessary for Python 2 compatibility; return statements can be used directly in Python 3-only code.It’s important to note that any generator function decorated by
@dowill no longer return a generator, but instead it will return an Effect, which must be used just like any other Effect.Errors are also converted to normal exceptions:
@do def foo(): try: thing = yield Effect(Error(RuntimeError('foo'))) except RuntimeError: yield do_return('got a RuntimeError as expected')
(This decorator is named for Haskell’s
donotation, which is similar in spirit).
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effect.do.do_return(val)¶ Specify a return value for a @do function.
The result of this function must be yielded. e.g.:
@do def foo(): yield do_return('hello')
If you’re writing Python 3-only code, you don’t need to use this function, and can just use the return statement as normal.