scalaz validation and list monad

雨燕双飞 提交于 2019-12-05 06:54:47

If you have a list of validations of A, you can turn it into a validation of lists of A using sequence:

List(1, 2).map(s2).sequence[({type l[a]=Validation[String, a]})#l, Int] 

(if I understand the question correctly). So you get

val result = for {
  i <- s
  k <- List(1, 2).map(s2).sequence[({type l[a]=Validation[String, a]})#l, Int] 
} yield "fine"

You seem to be using validation for the side effect. This is not what its ment for. You use the return values in functional programming.

Validation in a for comprehension continues with on success, but breaks of at a failure and returns the failure.

scala> def g(i: Int): Validation[String, Int] = { 
          println(i); if(i % 2 == 0) i.success else "odd".fail 
       }
g: (i: Int)scalaz.Validation[String,Int]

scala> val result = for {
     |   i <- g(1)
     |   j <- g(2)
     | } yield (i,j)
1
result: scalaz.Validation[String,(Int, Int)] = Failure(odd)

scala> val result = for {
     |   i <- g(2)
     |   j <- g(1)
     | } yield (i,j)
2
1
result: scalaz.Validation[String,(Int, Int)] = Failure(odd)


scala> val result = for {
     |   i <- g(2)
     |   j <- g(2)
     | } yield (i,j)
2
2
result: scalaz.Validation[String,(Int, Int)] = Success((2,2))


scala> val result = for {
     |   i <- g(1)
     |   j <- g(1)
     | } yield (i,j)
1
result: scalaz.Validation[String,(Int, Int)] = Failure(odd)
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