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Editorial Team
Asked: May 11, 20262026-05-11T16:53:24+00:00 2026-05-11T16:53:24+00:00

I’ve recently been learning about functional programming (specifically Haskell, but I’ve gone through tutorials

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I’ve recently been learning about functional programming (specifically Haskell, but I’ve gone through tutorials on Lisp and Erlang as well). While I found the concepts very enlightening, I still don’t see the practical side of the “no side effects” concept. What are the practical advantages of it? I’m trying to think in the functional mindset, but there are some situations that just seem overly complex without the ability to save state in an easy way (I don’t consider Haskell’s monads ‘easy’).

Is it worth continuing to learn Haskell (or another purely functional language) in-depth? Is functional or stateless programming actually more productive than procedural? Is it likely that I will continue to use Haskell or another functional language later, or should I learn it only for the understanding?

I care less about performance than productivity. So I’m mainly asking if I will be more productive in a functional language than a procedural/object-oriented/whatever.

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  1. Editorial Team
    Editorial Team
    2026-05-11T16:53:24+00:00Added an answer on May 11, 2026 at 4:53 pm

    Read Functional Programming in a Nutshell.

    There are lots of advantages to stateless programming, not least of which is dramatically multithreaded and concurrent code. To put it bluntly, mutable state is enemy of multithreaded code. If values are immutable by default, programmers don’t need to worry about one thread mutating the value of shared state between two threads, so it eliminates a whole class of multithreading bugs related to race conditions. Since there are no race conditions, there’s no reason to use locks either, so immutability eliminates another whole class of bugs related to deadlocks as well.

    That’s the big reason why functional programming matters, and probably the best one for jumping on the functional programming train. There are also lots of other benefits, including simplified debugging (i.e. functions are pure and do not mutate state in other parts of an application), more terse and expressive code, less boilerplate code compared to languages which are heavily dependent on design patterns, and the compiler can more aggressively optimize your code.

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