Safe Haskell | Safe |
---|---|
Language | Haskell98 |
Documentation
Case analysis for the Bool
type.
evaluates to bool
x y px
when p
is False
, and evaluates to y
when p
is True
.
This is equivalent to if p then y else x
; that is, one can
think of it as an if-then-else construct with its arguments
reordered.
Examples
Basic usage:
>>>
bool "foo" "bar" True
"bar">>>
bool "foo" "bar" False
"foo"
Confirm that
and bool
x y pif p then y else x
are
equivalent:
>>>
let p = True; x = "bar"; y = "foo"
>>>
bool x y p == if p then y else x
True>>>
let p = False
>>>
bool x y p == if p then y else x
True
Since: 4.7.0.0