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Package monad
Short Description Functional programming Monad support
License BSD-3-Clause
Homepage http://zf4.biz/packages?utm_source=packagist&utm_medium=web&utm_campaign=blinks&utm_content=monad
Informations about the package monad
chippyash/Monad
Quality Assurance
The above badges represent the current development branch. As a rule, I don't push to GitHub unless tests, coverage and usability are acceptable. This may not be true for short periods of time; on holiday, need code for some other downstream project etc. If you need stable code, use a tagged version. Read 'Further Documentation' and 'Installation'.
Test Contract in the docs directory.
Developer support for PHP5.4 & 5.5 was withdrawn at version 2.0.0 of this library.
If you need support for PHP 5.4 or 5.5, please use a version>=1,<2
Developer support for PHP <8 was withdrawn at version 3.0.0 of this library.
If you need support for PHP 7.x, please use a version>=2,<3
What?
Provides a Monadic type
According to my mentor, Monads are either difficult to explain or difficult to code,
i.e. you can say how
or what
but not at the same time. If
you need further illumination, start with wikipedia
Types supported
- Monadic Interface
- Abstract Monad
- Identity Monad
- Option Monad
- Some
- None
- FTry Monad
- Success
- Failure
- FMatch Monad
- Collection Monad
- Map Monad
- Set Monad
Why?
PHP is coming under increasing attack from functional hybrid languages such as Scala.
The difference is the buzzword of functional programming
. PHP can support this
paradigm, and this library introduces some basic monadic types. Indeed, learning
functional programming practices can make solutions in PHP far more robust.
Much of the power of monadic types comes through the use of the functional FMatch, Try and For Comprehension language constructs. PHP doesn't have these. This library provides:
- FMatch
- FTry
- FFor This is provided in the Assembly-Builder package
Key to functional programming is the use of strict typing and elevating functions as first class citizens within the language syntax. PHP5.4+ allows functions to be used as a typed parameter (Closure). It also appears that PHP devs are coming to terms with strict or hard types as the uptake of my strong-type library testifies.
How
The Monadic interface
A Monad has three things (according to my understanding of it):
- a value (which may be no value at all, a simple type, an object or a function)
- method of getting its value, often referred to as return()
- a way of binding (or using) the value into some function, often referred to as bind(), the return value of which is another Monad, often but not always of the same type as the donor Monad. (Rarely, it could be another class type.)
The Monadic Interface supplied here defines
-
bind(\Closure $function, array $args = []):Monadic
- The function signature should contain at least one parameter to receive the value
of the Monad. e.g.
function($val){return $val * 2;}
If you are using additional arguments in the $args array, you'll need to add them to the parameter list e.g.$ret = $m->bind(function($val, $mult){return $val * $mult;}, [4]);
Bear in mind that you can use the
use
clause as normal when defining your function to expose external parameter values. Caveat: start using this stuff in pure Async PHP programming and you can't use theuse
clause. You have been warned!
- The function signature should contain at least one parameter to receive the value
of the Monad. e.g.
- value():mixed - the return() method as
return
is a reserved word in PHP
Additionally, two helper methods are defined for the interface
- flatten():mixed - the monadic value
flattened
to a PHP native type or non Monadic object - static create(mixed $value):Monadic A factory method to create an instance of the concrete descendant Monad
Monads have an immutable value, that is to say, the result of the bind() method is another (Monadic) class. The original value is left alone.
The Monad Abstract class
Contains the Monad value holder and a syntatic sugar
helper magic __invoke() method that
proxies to value() if no parameters supplied or bind() if a Closure (with/without optional arguments)
are supplied.
Neither the Monadic interface or the abstract Monad class define how to set a value on construction of a concrete Monad. It usually makes sense to set the Monad's value on construction. Therefore in most circumstances you would create concrete Monad classes with some form of constructor.
Concrete Monad classes supplied
Identity
The simplest type of Monad
use Monad\Identity; $id = new Identity('foo'); //or $id = Identity::create('foo'); $fConcat = function($value, $fudge){return $value . $fudge}; $concat = $id->bind($fConcat, ['bar']) ->bind($fConcat, ['baz']); echo $concat->value(); //'foobarbaz' echo $id->value(); //'foo'
Option
An Option is a polymorphic Maybe Monad
that can exist in one of two states:
- Some - an option with a value
- None - an option with no value
As PHP does not have the language construct to create a polymorphic object by construction, you'll need to use the Option::create() static method. You can however use Option as a type hint for other class methods and returns
use Monad\Option; use Monad\Option\Some; use Monad\Option\None; /** * @param Option $opt * @return Option */ function doSomethingWithAnOption(Option $opt) { if ($opt instanceof None) { return $opt; } //must be a Some return $opt(doMyOtherThing()); //use magic invoke to bind } $someOption = Option::create('foo'); $noneOption = Option::create(); $one = doSomethingWithAnOption($someOption); $two = doSomethingWithAnOption($noneOption);
Under normal circumstances, Option uses the null
value to determine whether or not
to create a Some or a None; that is, the value passed into create() is tested against
null
. If it === null, then a None is created, else a Some. You can provide an
alternative test value as a second parameter to create()
$mySome = Option::create(true, false); $myNone = Option::create(false, false);
Once a None, always a None. No amount of binding will return anything other than a None.
On the other hand, a Some can become a None through binding, (or rather the result of
the bind() as of course the original Some remains immutable.) To assist in this,
Some->bind() can take an optional third parameter, which is the value to test against
for None (i.e. like the optional second parameter to Option::create() )
You should also note that calling ->value() on a None will generate a RuntimeException because of course, a None does not have a value!
Other methods supported
- getOrElse(mixed:elseValue) If the Option is a Some, return the Option->value() else return the elseValue
FTry
An FTry is a polymorphic Try Monad
that can exist in one of two states:
- Success - an FTry with a value
- Failure - an FTry with a PHP Exception as a value
Try
is a reserved word in PHP, so I have called this class FTry to mean Functional Try
.
As PHP does not have the language construct to create a polymorphic object by construction, you'll need to use the FTry::with() (or FTry::create()) static method. You can however use FTry as a type hint for other class methods and returns
FTry::on(value) will catch any Exception incurred in processing the value, and return a Success or Failure class appropriately. This makes it ideal for the simple case of wrapping a PHP transaction in a Try - Catch block:
use Monad\FTry; use Monad\FMatch; FMatch::on(FTry::with($myFunction($initialValue()))) ->Monad_FTry_Success(function ($v) {doSomethingGood($v);}) ->Monad_FTry_Failure( function (\Exception $e) { echo "Exception: " . $e->getMessage(); } );
A fairly simplistic example, and one where you might question its value, as it could have been written as easily using conventional PHP. But: A Success or Failure is still a Monad, and so you can still bind (map) onto the resultant class, flatten it etc.
Like Option, FTry also supports the getOrElse(mixed:elseValue)
method allowing for implementing
default behaviours:
echo FTry::with(myComplexPrintableTransaction()) ->getOrElse('Sorry - that failed');
For completeness, FTry also supports isSuccess()
:
echo 'The colour is' . FTry::with(myTest())->isSuccess() ? 'blue' : 'red';
Once a Failure, always a Failure. However, A Success can yield either a Success or a Failure as a result of binding.
If you really want to throw the exception contained in a Failure use the pass()
method
$try = FTry::with($myFunction()); if (!$try->isSuccess()) $try->pass();
FMatch
The FMatch Monad allows you to carry out type pattern matching to create powerful and
dynamic functional equivalents of case statements
.
'Match' is a reserved word since PHP8. Thus for V3 of this library, I've renamed Match to FMatch.
The basic syntax is
use Monad\FMatch; $result = FMatch::on($initialValue) ->test() ->test() ->value();
where test() can be the name of a native PHP type or the name of a class, e.g.:
$result = FMatch::on($initialValue) ->string() ->Monad_Option() ->Monad_Identity() ->value()
You can use the FMatch::any() method to catch anything not matched by a specific matcher:
$result = FMatch::on($initialValue) ->string() ->int() ->any() ->value();
You can provide a concrete value as a parameter to each test, or a function. e.g.
$result = FMatch::on($initialValue) ->string('foo') ->Monad_Option( function ($v) { return FMatch::on($v) ->Monad_Option_Some(function ($v) { return $v->value(); }) ->Monad_Option_None(function () { throw new \Exception(); }) ->value(); } ) ->Monad_Identity( function ($v) { return $v->value() . 'bar'; } ) ->any(function(){return 'any';}) ->value();
You can find this being tested in FMatchTest::testYouCanNestFMatches()
Supported native type matches
- string
- integer|int|long
- float|double|real
- null
- array
- bool|boolean
- callable|function|closure
- file
- dir|directory
- object
- scalar
- numeric
- resource
Supported class matching
Use the fully namespaced name of the class to match, substituting the backslash \
with an underscore e.g. to test for Monad\Option
use Monad_Option
Collection
The Monad Collection provides a structured array that behaves as a Monad. It is based on the SPL ArrayObject.
Very important to note however is that unlike a PHP array, the Collection is type specific, i.e. you specify Collection type specifically or by default as the first member of its construction array.
Another 'gotcha': As the Collection is an object, calling Collection->value() will
just return the Collection itself. If you want to get a PHP array from the Collection
then use toArray()
which proxies the underlying getArrayCopy()
and is provided
as most PHPers are familiar with toArray
as being a missing 'magic' call.
Why re-invent the wheel? ArrayObject (underpinning Collection,) behaves in subtly different ways than a plain vanilla array. One: it's an object and can therefore be passed by reference, Two: because of One, it (hopefully TBC,) stops segfaults occurring in a multi thread environment. Even if Two doesn't pan out, then One still holds.
use Monad\Collection; $c = Collection::create([1,2,3,4]); //or $c = Collection::create([1,2,3,4], 'integer'); //to create an empty collection, you must specify type $c = Collection::create([], 'integer'); $c = Collection::create([], 'Monad\Option');
You can get and test a Collection:
$c = Collection::create([1,2,3,4]); $v = $c[2] // == 3 if (!isset($c[6]) { ... }
Although the Collection implements the ArrayAccess interface, trying to set or unset
a value $mCollection[0] = 'foo'
or unset($mCollection[0])
will throw an
exception, as Collections are immutable by default. In some circumstances, you
may want to change this. Use the MutableCollection to allow mutability.
As usual, this is not really a problem, as you can bind() or use each() on a Collection
to return another Collection, (which can contain values of a different type.)
Wherever possible, I've expressed the Collection implementation in terms of FMatch
statements, not only because it usually means tighter code, but as something that
you can look at (and criticise hopefully!) by example.
You can append to a Collection, returning a new Collection
$s1 = new Collection([1,2,3]); $s2 = $s1->append(4); //or $s2 = $s1->append(['foo'=>4]);
You can get the difference of two collections:
$s1 = Collection::create([1, 2, 3, 6, 7]); $s2 = Collection::create([6,7]); $s3 = $s1->vDiff($s2); //difference on values $s4 = $s1->kDiff($s2); //difference on keys
And the intersection:
$s1 = Collection::create([1, 2, 3, 6, 7]); $s2 = Collection::create([6,7]); $s3 = $s1->vIntersect($s2); //intersect on values $s4 = $s1->kIntersect($s2); //intersect on keys
uDiff
, kDiff
, vIntersect
and kIntersect
can take a second optional Closure parameter which is used
as the comparator method.
You can get the union of two collections, either by value or key:
$s1 = Collection::create([1, 2, 3, 6, 7]); $s2 = Collection::create([3, 6, 7, 8]); $valueUnion = $s1->vUnion($s2); $keyUnion = $s1->kUnion($s2);
You can get the head and the tail of a collection:
$s1 = Collection::create([1, 2, 3, 6, 7]); echo $s1->head()[0] // 1 echo $s1->tail()[0] // 2 echo $s1->tail()[3] // 7
There are four function mapping methods for a Collection:
-
the standard Monadic bind(), whose function takes the entire
value array
of the Collection as its parameter. You should return an array as a result of the function but in the event that you do not, it will be forced to a Collection. -
the each() method. Like bind(), this takes a function and an optional array of additional parameter values to pass on. However, the each function is called for each member of the collection. The results of the function are collected into a new Collection and returned. In this way, it behaves rather like the PHP native array_map.
-
the reduce() method. Acts just like array_reduce and returns a single value as a result of function passed in as a paramter.
- the filter() method. Acts just like array_filter, but returns a new Collection as a result of the reduction.
Note that you can change the base type of a resultant Collection as a result of these mapping methods().
I chose Collection as the name as it doesn't clash with list
which is a PHP reserved name.
In essence, Collection will to all intents and purposes be a List, but for die hard PHPers
still behave as an array.
A secondary design consideration, is that you should be able to use Collection oblivious of that fact that it is a Monad, except that it is type specific.
Map
A Map is a simple extension of a Collection that requires its entries to have a string (hash) key. It obeys all the rules of a Collection except that
use Monad/Map; $m1 = new Map(['foo']);
will not work, but
$m1 = new Map(['foo'=>'bar']);
will work. You can as usual, specify the type as a second parameter. The
vUnion
, vIntersect
and vDiff
methods are unspecified for Maps and will throw a
BadMethodCallException
.
Set
A Set is a simple extension of Collection that enforces the following rules
- A Set can only have unique values (of the same type)
- A Set doesn't care about the keys, its the values that are important
- Operations on a Set return a Set
use Monad/Set; $setA = new Set(['a','b','c']); $setB = new Set(['a','c']); $setC = $setA->vIntersect($setB); $setD = $setA->vUnion($setB); $setE = $setA->vDiff($setB);
As with a Collection, you can specify an empty construction value and a second type value. You can also append to a Set to return a new Set.
The kUnion
, kIntersect
and kDiff
methods are unspecified for Maps and will throw a
BadMethodCallException
.
All other Collection methods are supported, returning Sets where expected.
The ->vIntersect(), ->vUnion() and ->diff() methods all accept a second equality function parameter as per Collection. However, for Set, if none is provided it will default to using a sane default, that is to casting non stringifiable values to a serialized hash of the value and using that for comparison. Supply your own functions if this default is inadequate for your purposes.
Further documentation
Please note that what you are seeing of this documentation displayed on Github is always the latest dev-master. The features it describes may not be in a released version yet. Please check the documentation of the version you Compose in, or download.
Test Contract in the docs directory.
Check out ZF4 Packages for more packages
UML
Changing the library
- fork it
- write the test
- amend it
- do a pull request
Found a bug you can't figure out?
- fork it
- write the test
- do a pull request
NB. Make sure you rebase to HEAD before your pull request
Or - raise an issue ticket.
Where?
The library is hosted at Github. It is available at Packagist.org
Installation
Install Composer
For production
"chippyash/monad": "~3.0"
Or to use the latest, possibly unstable version:
"chippyash/monad": "dev-master"
For development
Clone this repo, and then run Composer in local repo root to pull in dependencies
git clone [email protected]:chippyash/Monad.git Monad cd Monad composer install
To run the tests:
cd Monad vendor/bin/phpunit -c test/phpunit.xml test/
Debugging
Because PHP doesn't really support functional programming at it's core level, debugging using XDebug etc becomes a nested mess. Some things I've found helpful:
-
isolate your tests, at least at the initial stage. If you get a problem, create a test that does one thing - the thing you are trying to debug. Use that as your start point.
-
be mindful of value() and flatten(), the former gets the immediate Monad value, the latter gives you a PHP fundamental.
-
when constructing FMatches, ensure the value contained in the FMatch conforms to the type you are expecting. Remember, FMatch returns a FMatch with a value. And yes, I've tripped up on this myself.
-
keep running the other tests. Seems simple, but in the headlong pursuit of your single objective, it's easy to forget that the library is interdependent (and will become increasingly so as we are able to wrap new functionality back into the original code. e.g. Collection is dependent on FMatch: when FFor is implemented, FMatch will change.) Run the whole test suite on a regular basis. That way you catch anything that has broken upstream functionality. This library will be complete when it, as far as possible, expresses itself in terms of itself!
- the tests that are in place are there for a good reason: open an issue if you think they are wrong headed, misguided etc
License
This software library is released under the BSD 3 Clause license
This software library is Copyright (c) 2015,2021 Ashley Kitson, UK
This software library contains code items that are derived from other works:
None of the contained code items breaks the overriding license, or vice versa, as far as I can tell. If at all unsure, please seek appropriate advice.
If the original copyright owners of the derived code items object to this inclusion, please contact the author.
Thanks
I didn't do this by myself. I'm deeply indebted to those that trod the path before me.
The following have done work on which this library is based:
History
V1.0.0 Initial Release
V1.1.0 Added FTry
V1.2.0 Added Collection
V1.2.1 fixes on Collection
V1.2.2 add sort order for vUnion method
V1.2.3 allow descendent monadic types
V1.2.4 add each() method to Collection
V1.2.5 move from coveralls to codeclimate
V1.2.6 Add link to packages
V1.2.7 Code cleanup - verify PHP7 compatibility
V1.3.0 Collection is immutable. Added MutableCollection for convenience
V1.4.0 Add Map class - enforced string type keys for collection members
Add convenience method append() to Collection === ->vUnion(new Collection([$nValue]))
V1.5.0 Add Set class
V1.5.1 Add additional checking for Maps and Sets. diff() and intersect() deprecated, use the kDiff(), uDiff, kIntersect() and uIntersect() methods;
V1.5.2 build script update
V1.5.3 update composer - forced by packagist composer.json format change
V2.0.0 BC Break. Support for PHP <5.6 withdrawn
V2.0.1 fixes for PHP >= 7.1
V2.1.0 Change of license from GPL V3 to BSD 3 Clause
V2.1.1 Flatten value in the bind method of FTry, so in case the binded function returns a Success, we do not end up with nested Success. PR by josselinauguste
V3.0.0 BC Break. Support for PHP <8 withdrawn. Match renamed to FMatch.