Legend:
Library
Module
Module type
Parameter
Class
Class type
Syntax module for Result. This is intended to be opened locally in functions which use result for control-flow. Within the scope of this module, the code can include binding operators, leading to a let-style syntax.
See also Result
val return : 'a->('a, 'e)Stdlib.result
return x is Ok x.
val return_unit : (unit, 'e)Stdlib.result
return_unit is Ok ().
val return_none : ('a option, 'e)Stdlib.result
return_none is Ok None.
val return_some : 'a->('a option, 'e)Stdlib.result
return_some x is Ok (Some x).
val return_nil : ('a list, 'e)Stdlib.result
return_nil is Ok [].
val return_true : (bool, 'e)Stdlib.result
return_true is Ok true.
val return_false : (bool, 'e)Stdlib.result
return_false is Ok false.
Note that we do not provide return_ok nor return_error. Both of these functions are possible but somewhat confusing and rarely useful in practice. If you need to carry results within a Result-monad computation (yielding to values of the type (('a, 'e) result, 'e) result), you need to do so by hand: return (Ok …) and return (Error …).
val fail : 'e->('a, 'e)Stdlib.result
fail e is Error e. It is also an alias for error.
val let* :
('a, 'e)Stdlib.result->('a->('b, 'e)Stdlib.result)->('b, 'e)Stdlib.result
let* is a binding operator alias for Result.bind and >>?.
val let+ : ('a, 'e)Stdlib.result->('a->'b)->('b, 'e)Stdlib.result
let+ is a binding operator alias for Result.map and >|?.
Note that we do not provide and* nor and+. Both of these are possible but their type is unsatisfying because the errors do not compose well. You can use both (below) if need be.
val join : (unit, 'e)Stdlib.result list->(unit, 'e list)Stdlib.result
join is the joining of success/failure unit values.
val all : ('a, 'e)Stdlib.result list->('a list, 'e list)Stdlib.result
all is the joining of success/failure non-unit values.
val both :
('a, 'e)Stdlib.result->('b, 'e)Stdlib.result->('a * 'b, 'e list)Stdlib.result
both is the joining of two success/failure non-unit values.