What's the difference between undefined in Haskell and null in Java?

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逝去的感伤
逝去的感伤 2021-01-31 07:12

Both are terms whose type is the intersection of all types (uninhabited). Both can be passed around in code without failing until one attempts to evaluate them. The only differe

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  • 2021-01-31 08:03

    What's the difference between undefined in Haskell and null in Java?

    Ok, let's back up a little.

    "undefined" in Haskell is an example of a "bottom" value (denoted ⊥). Such a value represents any undefined, stuck or partial state in the program.

    Many different forms of bottom exist: non-terminating loops, exceptions, pattern match failures -- basically any state in the program that is undefined in some sense. The value undefined :: a is a canonical example of a value that puts the program in an undefined state.

    undefined itself isn't particularly special -- its not wired in -- and you can implement Haskell's undefined using any bottom-yielding expression. E.g. this is a valid implementation of undefined:

     > undefined = undefined
    

    Or exiting immediately (the old Gofer compiler used this definition):

     > undefined | False = undefined
    

    The primary property of bottom is that if an expression evaluates to bottom, your entire program will evaluate to bottom: the program is in an undefined state.

    Why would you want such a value? Well, in a lazy language, you can often manipulate structures or functions that store bottom values, without the program being itself bottom.

    E.g. a list of infinite loops is perfectly cromulent:

     > let xs = [ let f = f in f 
                , let g n = g (n+1) in g 0
                ]
     > :t xs
     xs :: [t]
     > length xs
     2
    

    I just can't do much with the elements of the list:

     > head xs
     ^CInterrupted.
    

    This manipulation of infinite stuff is part of why Haskell's so fun and expressive. A result of laziness is Haskell pays particularly close attention to bottom values.

    However, clearly, the concept of bottom applies equally well to Java, or any (non-total) language. In Java, there are many expressions that yield "bottom" values:

    • comparing a reference against null (though note, not null itself, which is well-defined);
    • division by zero;
    • out-of-bounds exceptions;
    • an infinite loop, etc.

    You just don't have the ability to substitute one bottom for another very easily, and the Java compiler doesn't do a lot to reason about bottom values. However, such values are there.

    In summary,

    • dereferencing a null value in Java is one specific expression that yields a bottom value in Java;
    • the undefined value in Haskell is a generic bottom-yielding expression that can be used anywhere a bottom value is required in Haskell.

    That's how they're similar.

    Postscript

    As to the question of null itself: why it is considered bad form?

    • Firstly, Java's null is essentially equivalent to adding an implicit Maybe a to every type a in Haskell.
    • Dereferencing null is equivalent to pattern matching for only the Just case: f (Just a) = ... a ...

    So when the value passed in is Nothing (in Haskell), or null (in Java), your program reaches an undefined state. This is bad: your program crashes.

    So, by adding null to every type, you've just made it far easier to create bottom values by accident -- the types no longer help you. Your language is no longer helping you prevent that particular kind of error, and that's bad.

    Of course, other bottom values are still there: exceptions (like undefined) , or infinite loops. Adding a new possible failure mode to every function -- dereferencing null -- just makes it easier to write programs that crash.

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  • 2021-01-31 08:16

    Your description isn't quite correct. You're saying null can't be evaluated. However since java is an eager language, this would mean that f(null) would throw an NPE no matter what the definition of f is (because method arguments are always evaluated before the method runs).

    The only reason that you can pass around undefined in haskell without getting an exception is that haskell is lazy and does not evaluate arguments unless needed.

    One further difference between undefined and null is that undefined is a simple value defined in the standard library. If it weren't defined in the standard library you could define it yourself (by writing myUndefined = error "My Undefined for example).

    In Java null is a keyword. If there were no null keyword, you wouldn't be able to define it (doing the equivalent of the haskell definition, i.e. Object myNull = throw(new Exception()), wouldn't work because the expression would be evaluated right there).

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