A functional programming Result type for Python with Success/Failure variants
Project description
Python Result Type
A functional programming Result type for Python, inspired by Rust's Result<T, E> and similar to PyMonad's Either, but with more intuitive naming (Success/Failure instead of Right/Left).
🚀 Features
- Intuitive API:
SuccessandFailureinstead of crypticRight/Left - Type Safe: Full generic type support with
Result[T, E] - Chainable Operations: Use
.then()method or>>operator for clean chaining - Exception Safety: Automatic exception handling in chained operations
- Zero Dependencies: Pure Python with no external dependencies
- Comprehensive: Includes helper functions and decorators for common patterns
- Well Tested: 100% test coverage with extensive edge case testing
📦 Installation
pip install python-result-type
🎯 Quick Start
Basic Usage
from result_type import Success, Failure, Result
def divide(a: float, b: float) -> Result[float, str]:
if b == 0:
return Failure("Division by zero")
return Success(a / b)
# Success case
result = divide(10, 2)
if result.is_success():
print(f"Result: {result.value}") # Result: 5.0
else:
print(f"Error: {result.error}")
# Failure case
result = divide(10, 0)
if result.is_failure():
print(f"Error: {result.error}") # Error: Division by zero
Chaining Operations
Chain operations that can fail using .then() or the >> operator:
from result_type import Success, Failure
def divide(a: float, b: float) -> Result[float, str]:
if b == 0:
return Failure("Division by zero")
return Success(a / b)
def multiply_by_2(x: float) -> Result[float, str]:
return Success(x * 2)
def subtract_1(x: float) -> Result[float, str]:
if x < 1:
return Failure("Result would be negative")
return Success(x - 1)
# Method 1: Using .then() method
result = (
divide(10, 2)
.then(multiply_by_2)
.then(subtract_1)
.map(lambda x: x + 5)
)
# Method 2: Using >> operator (cleaner syntax)
result = divide(10, 2) >> multiply_by_2 >> subtract_1
# Method 3: Mixed approach
result = (
divide(10, 2)
>> multiply_by_2
.map(lambda x: x + 10) # Transform without failure
>> subtract_1
)
if result.is_success():
print(f"Final result: {result.value}")
else:
print(f"Error occurred: {result.error}")
Safe Function Calls
Automatically handle exceptions with safe_call:
from result_type import safe_call
# Wrap risky function calls
result = safe_call(
lambda: 10 / 0,
"Math operation failed"
)
if result.is_failure():
print(result.error) # "Math operation failed: division by zero"
# Use as decorator
from result_type import safe_call_decorator
@safe_call_decorator("Database error")
def risky_database_operation():
# Some operation that might throw
return fetch_user_from_db()
result = risky_database_operation()
📚 Complete API Reference
Core Types
Result[T, E]
Abstract base class representing either success or failure.
Methods:
is_success() -> bool- Check if result is Successis_failure() -> bool- Check if result is Failurethen(func: Callable[[T], Result[U, E]]) -> Result[U, E]- Chain operationsmap(func: Callable[[T], U]) -> Result[U, E]- Transform success valuemap_error(func: Callable[[E], F]) -> Result[T, F]- Transform error valueunwrap() -> T- Extract value or raise exceptionunwrap_or(default: T) -> T- Extract value or return defaultunwrap_or_else(func: Callable[[E], T]) -> T- Extract value or compute from error
Success[T]
Represents successful result containing a value.
success_result = Success(42)
print(success_result.value) # 42
print(success_result.is_success()) # True
Failure[E]
Represents failed result containing an error.
failure_result = Failure("Something went wrong")
print(failure_result.error) # "Something went wrong"
print(failure_result.is_failure()) # True
Helper Functions
success(value: T) -> Success[T]
Create a Success result.
from result_type import success
result = success(42) # Same as Success(42)
failure(error: E) -> Failure[E]
Create a Failure result.
from result_type import failure
result = failure("error") # Same as Failure("error")
safe_call(func: Callable[[], T], error_msg: str = None) -> Result[T, str]
Safely call a function that might raise exceptions.
from result_type import safe_call
result = safe_call(lambda: risky_operation())
if result.is_failure():
print(f"Operation failed: {result.error}")
safe_call_decorator(error_msg: str = None)
Decorator version of safe_call.
from result_type import safe_call_decorator
@safe_call_decorator("API call failed")
def call_external_api():
return requests.get("https://api.example.com").json()
result = call_external_api() # Returns Result[dict, str]
🔄 Chaining Operations
Error Propagation
When chaining operations, errors automatically propagate:
result = (
Success(10)
>> (lambda x: Failure("Something went wrong")) # This fails
>> (lambda x: Success(x * 2)) # This won't execute
>> (lambda x: Success(x + 1)) # Neither will this
)
print(result.error) # "Something went wrong"
Exception Handling in Chains
Exceptions in chained operations are automatically converted to Failure:
def risky_operation(x: int) -> Result[int, str]:
return Success(x / 0) # This will raise ZeroDivisionError
result = Success(10) >> risky_operation
print(result.is_failure()) # True
print(type(result.error)) # <class 'ZeroDivisionError'>
🆚 Comparison with Alternatives
vs PyMonad Either
# PyMonad Either (less intuitive)
from pymonad.either import Left, Right
result = Right(42) # Success
result = Left("error") # Failure
# This library (more readable)
from result_type import Success, Failure
result = Success(42) # Clear success intent
result = Failure("error") # Clear failure intent
vs Exception Handling
# Traditional exception handling
try:
result = risky_operation()
result = transform(result)
result = another_transform(result)
except Exception as e:
handle_error(e)
# With Result type
result = (
safe_call(risky_operation)
>> safe_transform
>> safe_another_transform
)
if result.is_failure():
handle_error(result.error)
🧪 Real-World Examples
Database Operations
from result_type import Result, Success, Failure
def fetch_user(user_id: str) -> Result[dict, str]:
try:
user = database.users.find_one({"_id": user_id})
if not user:
return Failure("User not found")
return Success(user)
except Exception as e:
return Failure(f"Database error: {e}")
def validate_user(user: dict) -> Result[dict, str]:
if not user.get("is_active"):
return Failure("User is inactive")
return Success(user)
def get_user_permissions(user: dict) -> Result[list, str]:
permissions = user.get("permissions", [])
if not permissions:
return Failure("User has no permissions")
return Success(permissions)
# Chain the operations
result = (
fetch_user("user123")
>> validate_user
>> get_user_permissions
)
if result.is_success():
print(f"User permissions: {result.value}")
else:
print(f"Failed to get permissions: {result.error}")
API Calls
import requests
from result_type import safe_call, Result, Success, Failure
def fetch_weather(city: str) -> Result[dict, str]:
return safe_call(
lambda: requests.get(f"http://api.weather.com/{city}").json(),
f"Failed to fetch weather for {city}"
)
def extract_temperature(weather_data: dict) -> Result[float, str]:
try:
temp = weather_data["current"]["temperature"]
return Success(float(temp))
except (KeyError, ValueError, TypeError) as e:
return Failure(f"Invalid weather data: {e}")
def celsius_to_fahrenheit(celsius: float) -> Result[float, str]:
return Success(celsius * 9/5 + 32)
# Chain API call and transformations
result = (
fetch_weather("London")
>> extract_temperature
>> celsius_to_fahrenheit
)
if result.is_success():
print(f"Temperature in Fahrenheit: {result.value}")
else:
print(f"Error: {result.error}")
File Operations
from pathlib import Path
from result_type import safe_call, Result
def read_config_file(path: str) -> Result[dict, str]:
def _read_and_parse():
content = Path(path).read_text()
return json.loads(content)
return safe_call(_read_and_parse, f"Failed to read config from {path}")
def validate_config(config: dict) -> Result[dict, str]:
required_fields = ["api_key", "database_url", "port"]
missing = [field for field in required_fields if field not in config]
if missing:
return Failure(f"Missing required fields: {missing}")
return Success(config)
def start_application(config: dict) -> Result[str, str]:
# Application startup logic here
return Success(f"Application started on port {config['port']}")
# Chain configuration loading and validation
result = (
read_config_file("config.json")
>> validate_config
>> start_application
)
if result.is_success():
print(result.value) # "Application started on port 8080"
else:
print(f"Startup failed: {result.error}")
🧪 Testing
# Install development dependencies
pip install python-result-type[dev]
# Run tests
pytest
# Run tests with coverage
pytest --cov=result_type --cov-report=html
# Run type checking
mypy result_type
# Format code
black result_type tests
📄 Type Safety
This library is fully typed and compatible with mypy:
from result_type import Result
def typed_operation(x: int) -> Result[str, str]:
if x < 0:
return Failure("Negative numbers not allowed")
return Success(str(x))
# mypy will catch type errors
result: Result[str, str] = typed_operation(42)
🤝 Contributing
Contributions are welcome! Please read our Contributing Guide for details.
- Fork the repository
- Create a feature branch
- Add tests for new functionality
- Ensure all tests pass
- Submit a pull request
📜 License
This project is licensed under the MIT License - see the LICENSE file for details.
🙏 Acknowledgments
- Inspired by Rust's Result type
- Similar concepts from PyMonad
- Functional programming patterns from Haskell's Either type
📈 Changelog
1.0.0
- Initial release
- Core Result, Success, and Failure types
- Chaining with
.then()and>>operator - Helper functions and decorators
- Comprehensive test suite
- Full type annotations
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