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Home/ Questions/Q 7818113
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Editorial Team
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Editorial Team
Asked: June 2, 20262026-06-02T06:28:05+00:00 2026-06-02T06:28:05+00:00

This works: c <- fmap lines (readFile d:\\tmp\\h.txt) let h = map (read ::

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This works:

c <- fmap lines (readFile "d:\\tmp\\h.txt")  
let h = map (read :: String -> Int) c 

while “superposition” of those two lines those not compile

fmap (read :: String -> Int) $ fmap lines (readFile "d:\\tmp\\h.txt")

it generates error:

interactive:1:36:
    Couldn't match expected type `Char' with actual type `[Char]'
    Expected type: String -> String
      Actual type: String -> [String]
    In the first argument of `fmap', namely `lines'
    In the second argument of `($)', namely
      `fmap lines (readFile "d:\\tmp\\h.txt")

Why it does not compile and how to do this in one line? What I want is achieve a simplicity of python

[int(i) for i in open("d:\\tmp\\h.txt")]
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1 Answer

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  1. Editorial Team
    Editorial Team
    2026-06-02T06:28:08+00:00Added an answer on June 2, 2026 at 6:28 am

    You left the map out of your “superposition” (composition):

    h <- fmap (map (read :: String -> Int)) $ fmap lines (readFile "d:\\tmp\\h.txt") 
    

    You can simplify that to

    h <- fmap (map (read :: String -> Int) . lines) (readFile "d:\\tmp\\h.txt") 
    

    If you put an import Control.Applicative line at the top of your source file (or enter :m +Control.Applicative if you’re using ghci interactively), you can use the <$> operator instead of fmap to make it look cleaner. (They do exactly the same thing, they’re just spelled differently.)

    h <- map (read :: String -> Int) . lines <$> readFile "d:\\tmp\\h.txt"
    

    Finally, if you do need the type signature, you might find it looks clearer at the end of the line.

    h <- map read . lines <$> readFile "d:\\tmp\\h.txt" :: IO [Int]
    
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