Coursemega.com

Functional effect handling in Scala with Cats Effect

A peek on how functional programming experts deal with side effects

When you first hear about functional programming you might get the impression that it can only be used in toy examples or for very academic purposes. After all, FP is all about purity and almost every useful thing you can do in a program is impure: http calls, file IO, and so on.

What you’ll learn

Course Content

Requirements

When you first hear about functional programming you might get the impression that it can only be used in toy examples or for very academic purposes. After all, FP is all about purity and almost every useful thing you can do in a program is impure: http calls, file IO, and so on.

In this course I’m going to show you that FP is actually amazing for dealing with effects. By separating program description from execution you will be able to build computations that are easy to compose and reason about, while at the same time keeping all the usefulness of side-effects.

In order to do so, we are going to use the amazing Cats Effect library, which provides an IO monad to model our effects, a very rich API to compose them, and a highly-performant runtime to execute them.

The course is structured in many small/medium sized sections that focus on one specific topic. At the end of each section there is a final exercise to practice what you learned, and a quiz to help check your recall and understanding of the section.

By the end of the course, you will be able to:

Hopefully, you will also have some fun along way!