Consider the following piece of code:

import Prelude hiding (catch) import Control.Exception main :: IO () main = do t <- safeCall unsafeCall t putStrLn "Done." safeCall :: IO String safeCall = do return alwaysFails `catch` errorHandler --alwaysFails = throw (ErrorCall "Oh no!") alwaysFails = error "Oh no!" errorHandler :: SomeException -> IO String errorHandler e = do putStrLn "Caught" return "Ok." errorHandler_ e = errorHandler e >> return () unsafeCall :: String -> IO () unsafeCall = putStrLn

What might you expect the output to be? A straightforward transcription to Python might look like:

def main(): t = safeCall() unsafeCall(t) print "Done" def safeCall(): try: return alwaysFails() except: return errorHandler() def alwaysFails(): raise Exception("Oh no!") def errorHandler(): print "Caught." return "Ok." def unsafeCall(output): print output

and anyone with a passing familiarity with the any strict language will say, "Of course, it will output:"

Caught. Ok. Done.

Of course, lazy exceptions (which is what error emits) aren't called lazy for no reason; the Haskell code outputs:

*** Exception: Oh no!

What happened? Haskell was lazy, and didn't bother evaluating the pure insides of the IO return alwaysFails until it needed it for unsafeCall, at which point there was no more catch call guarding the code. If you don't believe me, you can add a trace around alwaysFails . You can also try installing errorHandler_ on unsafeCall .

What is the moral of the story? Well, one is that error is evil, but we already knew that...

You may install exception handlers for most IO-based errors the obvious way. (If we had replaced return alwaysFails with alwaysFails , the result would have been the strict one.) You may not install exception handlers for errors originating from pure code, since GHC reserves the right to schedule arbitrarily the time when your code is executed.

with , the result would have been the strict one.) You may not install exception handlers for errors originating from pure code, since GHC reserves the right to schedule arbitrarily the time when your code is executed. If pure code is emitting exceptions and you would like it to stop doing that, you'll probably need to force strictness with $! deepseq or rnf , which will force GHC to perform the computation inside your guarded area. As my readers point out, a good way to think about this is that the call is not what is exceptional, the structure is.

or , which will force GHC to perform the computation inside your guarded area. As my readers point out, a good way to think about this is that the call is not what is exceptional, the structure is. If you are getting an imprecise exception from pure code, but can't figure out where, good luck! I don't have a good recipe for figuring this out yet. (Nudge to my blog readers.)