Confused with the for-comprehension to flatMap/Map transformation

TL;DR go directly to the final example

I'll try and recap.

Definitions

The for comprehension is a syntax shortcut to combine flatMap and map in a way that's easy to read and reason about.

Let's simplify things a bit and assume that every class that provides both aforementioned methods can be called a monad and we'll use the symbol M[A] to mean a monad with an inner type A.

Examples

Some commonly seen monads include:

  • List[String] where
    • M[X] = List[X]
    • A = String
  • Option[Int] where
    • M[X] = Option[X]
    • A = Int
  • Future[String => Boolean] where
    • M[X] = Future[X]
    • A = (String => Boolean)

map and flatMap

Defined in a generic monad M[A]

 /* applies a transformation of the monad "content" mantaining the 
  * monad "external shape"  
  * i.e. a List remains a List and an Option remains an Option 
  * but the inner type changes
  */
  def map(f: A => B): M[B] 

 /* applies a transformation of the monad "content" by composing
  * this monad with an operation resulting in another monad instance 
  * of the same type
  */
  def flatMap(f: A => M[B]): M[B]

e.g.

  val list = List("neo", "smith", "trinity")

  //converts each character of the string to its corresponding code
  val f: String => List[Int] = s => s.map(_.toInt).toList 

  list map f
  >> List(List(110, 101, 111), List(115, 109, 105, 116, 104), List(116, 114, 105, 110, 105, 116, 121))

  list flatMap f
  >> List(110, 101, 111, 115, 109, 105, 116, 104, 116, 114, 105, 110, 105, 116, 121)

for expression

  1. Each line in the expression using the <- symbol is translated to a flatMap call, except for the last line which is translated to a concluding map call, where the "bound symbol" on the left-hand side is passed as the parameter to the argument function (what we previously called f: A => M[B]):

    // The following ...
    for {
      bound <- list
      out <- f(bound)
    } yield out
    
    // ... is translated by the Scala compiler as ...
    list.flatMap { bound =>
      f(bound).map { out =>
        out
      }
    }
    
    // ... which can be simplified as ...
    list.flatMap { bound =>
      f(bound)
    }
    
    // ... which is just another way of writing:
    list flatMap f
    
  2. A for-expression with only one <- is converted to a map call with the expression passed as argument:

    // The following ...
    for {
      bound <- list
    } yield f(bound)
    
    // ... is translated by the Scala compiler as ...
    list.map { bound =>
      f(bound)
    }
    
    // ... which is just another way of writing:
    list map f
    

Now to the point

As you can see, the map operation preserves the "shape" of the original monad, so the same happens for the yield expression: a List remains a List with the content transformed by the operation in the yield.

On the other hand each binding line in the for is just a composition of successive monads, which must be "flattened" to maintain a single "external shape".

Suppose for a moment that each internal binding was translated to a map call, but the right-hand was the same A => M[B] function, you would end up with a M[M[B]] for each line in the comprehension.
The intent of the whole for syntax is to easily "flatten" the concatenation of successive monadic operations (i.e. operations that "lift" a value in a "monadic shape": A => M[B]), with the addition of a final map operation that possibly performs a concluding transformation.

I hope this explains the logic behind the choice of translation, which is applied in a mechanical way, that is: n flatMap nested calls concluded by a single map call.

A contrived illustrative example
Meant to show the expressiveness of the for syntax

case class Customer(value: Int)
case class Consultant(portfolio: List[Customer])
case class Branch(consultants: List[Consultant])
case class Company(branches: List[Branch])

def getCompanyValue(company: Company): Int = {

  val valuesList = for {
    branch     <- company.branches
    consultant <- branch.consultants
    customer   <- consultant.portfolio
  } yield (customer.value)

  valuesList reduce (_ + _)
}

Can you guess the type of valuesList?

As already said, the shape of the monad is maintained through the comprehension, so we start with a List in company.branches, and must end with a List.
The inner type instead changes and is determined by the yield expression: which is customer.value: Int

valueList should be a List[Int]


This can be traslated as:

def bothMatch(pat:String,pat2:String,s:String):Option[Boolean] = for {
    f <- mkMatcher(pat)  // for every element from this [list, array,tuple]
    g <- mkMatcher(pat2) // iterate through every iteration of pat
} yield f(s) && g(s)

Run this for a better view of how its expanded

def match items(pat:List[Int] ,pat2:List[Char]):Unit = for {
        f <- pat
        g <- pat2
} println(f +"->"+g)

bothMatch( (1 to 9).toList, ('a' to 'i').toList)

results are:

1 -> a
1 -> b
1 -> c
...
2 -> a
2 -> b
...

This is similar to flatMap - loop through each element in pat and foreach element map it to each element in pat2


The rationale is to chain monadic operations which provides as a benefit, proper "fail fast" error handling.

It is actually pretty simple. The mkMatcher method returns an Option (which is a Monad). The result of mkMatcher, the monadic operation, is either a None or a Some(x).

Applying the map or flatMap function to a None always returns a None - the function passed as a parameter to map and flatMap is not evaluated.

Hence in your example, if mkMatcher(pat) returns a None, the flatMap applied to it will return a None (the second monadic operation mkMatcher(pat2) will not be executed) and the final mapwill again return a None. In other words, if any of the operations in the for comprehension, returns a None, you have a fail fast behavior and the rest of the operations are not executed.

This is the monadic style of error handling. The imperative style uses exceptions, which are basically jumps (to a catch clause)

A final note: the patterns function is a typical way of "translating" an imperative style error handling (try...catch) to a monadic style error handling using Option


I'm not a scala mega mind so feel free to correct me, but this is how I explain the flatMap/map/for-comprehension saga to myself!

To understand for comprehension and it's translation to scala's map / flatMap we must take small steps and understand the composing parts - map and flatMap. But isn't scala's flatMap just map with flatten you ask thyself! if so why do so many developers find it so hard to get the grasp of it or of for-comprehension / flatMap / map. Well, if you just look at scala's map and flatMap signature you see they return the same return type M[B] and they work on the same input argument A (at least the first part to the function they take) if that's so what makes a difference?

Our plan

  1. Understand scala's map.
  2. Understand scala's flatMap.
  3. Understand scala's for comprehension.`

Scala's map

scala map signature:

map[B](f: (A) => B): M[B]

But there is a big part missing when we look at this signature, and it's - where does this A comes from? our container is of type A so its important to look at this function in the context of the container - M[A]. Our container could be a List of items of type A and our map function takes a function which transform each items of type A to type B, then it returns a container of type B (or M[B])

Let's write map's signature taking into account the container:

M[A]: // We are in M[A] context.
    map[B](f: (A) => B): M[B] // map takes a function which knows to transform A to B and then it bundles them in M[B]

Note an extremely highly highly important fact about map - it bundles automatically in the output container M[B] you have no control over it. Let's us stress it again:

  1. map chooses the output container for us and its going to be the same container as the source we work on so for M[A] container we get the same M container only for B M[B] and nothing else!
  2. map does this containerization for us we just give a mapping from A to B and it would put it in the box of M[B] will put it in the box for us!

You see you did not specify how to containerize the item you just specified how to transform the internal items. And as we have the same container M for both M[A] and M[B] this means M[B] is the same container, meaning if you have List[A] then you are going to have a List[B] and more importantly map is doing it for you!

Now that we have dealt with map let's move on to flatMap.

Scala's flatMap

Let's see its signature:

flatMap[B](f: (A) => M[B]): M[B] // we need to show it how to containerize the A into M[B]

You see the big difference from map to flatMap in flatMap we are providing it with the function that does not just convert from A to B but also containerizes it into M[B].

why do we care who does the containerization?

So why do we so much care of the input function to map/flatMap does the containerization into M[B] or the map itself does the containerization for us?

You see in the context of for comprehension what's happening is multiple transformations on the item provided in the for so we are giving the next worker in our assembly line the ability to determine the packaging. imagine we have an assembly line each worker does something to the product and only the last worker is packaging it in a container! welcome to flatMap this is it's purpose, in map each worker when finished working on the item also packages it so you get containers over containers.

The mighty for comprehension

Now let's looks into your for comprehension taking into account what we said above:

def bothMatch(pat:String,pat2:String,s:String):Option[Boolean] = for {
    f <- mkMatcher(pat)   
    g <- mkMatcher(pat2)
} yield f(s) && g(s)

What have we got here:

  1. mkMatcher returns a container the container contains a function: String => Boolean
  2. The rules are the if we have multiple <- they translate to flatMap except for the last one.
  3. As f <- mkMatcher(pat) is first in sequence (think assembly line) all we want out of it is to take f and pass it to the next worker in the assembly line, we let the next worker in our assembly line (the next function) the ability to determine what would be the packaging back of our item this is why the last function is map.
  4. The last g <- mkMatcher(pat2) will use map this is because its last in assembly line! so it can just do the final operation with map( g => which yes! pulls out g and uses the f which has already been pulled out from the container by the flatMap therefore we end up with first:

    mkMatcher(pat) flatMap (f // pull out f function give item to next assembly line worker (you see it has access to f, and do not package it back i mean let the map determine the packaging let the next assembly line worker determine the container. mkMatcher(pat2) map (g => f(s) ...)) // as this is the last function in the assembly line we are going to use map and pull g out of the container and to the packaging back, its map and this packaging will throttle all the way up and be our package or our container, yah!