say
Send textual messages to a Handle in a thread-friendly way.
 
 
The motivation for this package is described in a blog post on Haskell’s
Missing Concurrency
Basics.
The simple explanation is, when writing a line of textual data to a Handle -
such as sending some messages t o ther terminal - we’d like to have the
following properties:
- Properly handle character encoding settings on the Handle
- For reasonably sized messages, ensure that the entire message is written in
one chunk to avoid interleaving data with other threads
- This includes the trailing newline character
 
- Avoid unnecessary memory allocations and copies
- Minimize locking
- Provide a simple API
On the last point: for the most part, you can make the following substitutions
in your API usage:
- Replace putStrLnwithsay
- Replace printwithsayShow
- If you’re using a Stringinstead ofText, replaceputStrLnwithsayString
In addition, sayErr, sayErrString and sayErrShow work on
standard error instead, and hSay, hSayString and hSayShow work
on arbitrary Handles.
#!/usr/bin/env stack
-- stack --install-ghc --resolver lts-6.23 runghc --package async --package say
import Control.Concurrent.Async (mapConcurrently)
import Control.Monad            (forM_, void)
import Say                      (sayString)
worker :: Int -> IO ()
worker ident = forM_ [1..1000] $ \msg -> sayString $ concat
    [ "Hello, I am worker #"
    , show ident
    , ", and this is message #"
    , show msg
    ]
main :: IO ()
main = void $ mapConcurrently worker [1..100]