Is the use of exceptions a bad practice in scala?

2019-03-12 10:43发布

I've seen many times pieces of scala code using Option (for simple values) or Either[List[Error], T] for handling errors.

this gives place to code like this

def createApplicationToken(accessToken: AccessToken): Either[List[Error], ApplicationToken] = {

// go to social info provider and fetch information
retrieveProviderInfo(accessToken).fold(
  errors  => Left(errors),
  info    => {
    // try to find user using the info from the provider
    // if it's not there, create user
    User.findOrCreateFromProviderInfo(info).fold(
      errors  => Left(errors),
      user    => {
        // try to create a fresh token and save it to the user
        user.refreshApplicationToken.fold(
          errors  => Left(errors),
          user    => Right(user.token)
        )
      }
    )
  }
)

Which produces a not so nice code nesting, forces you to deal with failures on every step, and also forces you to have all your functions return a Either[...]

So I'd like to know if

  • the use of exceptions is discouraged in scala (or functional programming in general)

  • there are any drawbacks in using them (regarding immutability or code concurrency)

  • exceptions are somehow in conflict with the principles or functional programming

  • you can think of a better way to code the given example

--

One could avoid the nesting by exiting the function as soon as an error is found using the return statement, but using return is also discouraged in scala...

3条回答
混吃等死
2楼-- · 2019-03-12 11:02

The following version uses the fact that the right projection of Either is a monad, and is exactly equivalent to your code:

def createApplicationToken(accessToken: AccessToken) = for {
   info <- retrieveProviderInfo(accessToken).right
   user <- User.findOrCreateFromProviderInfo(info).right
   refr <- user.refreshApplicationToken.right
} yield refr.token

And does a much better job of showing off the advantages of Either.

More generally, the rules are the same as in Java: use exceptions for exceptional situations. You just might find that you change your definition of exceptional a bit when you're working in this style—e.g., invalid user input isn't really exceptional, a timed-out network request isn't really exceptional, etc.

Right-biased Either since Scala 2.12

You can now omit .right, so the following code is equivalent since Scala 2.12:

def createApplicationToken(accessToken: AccessToken) = for {
   info <- retrieveProviderInfo(accessToken)
   user <- User.findOrCreateFromProviderInfo(info)
   refr <- user.refreshApplicationToken
} yield refr.token
查看更多
该账号已被封号
3楼-- · 2019-03-12 11:06

As om-nom-nom said, I asked a similar question: Throwing exceptions in Scala, what is the "official rule"

But it's not the only one I asked that may interest you, because I used to code with a lot of boilerplate code and a lot of indentation levels because of pattern matching etc...


查看更多
4楼-- · 2019-03-12 11:09

The answer varies between what is ideal and what is practical. Ideally, avoid using exceptions. Practically, you can't live without them.

Scala seems to favor one-liners and along those lines v2.10 has the new monad Try:

import scala.util.Try

def percentCompleted( total:Int, done:Int ): Int = Try (done * 100 / total) getOrElse 100

percentCompleted( 0, 10 )    // Catches divide-by-zero and returns 100% instead
查看更多
登录 后发表回答