this post was submitted on 22 Nov 2025
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I don't use any but I'm sure there are functional languages where () is a valid function.
In Haskell, that's "unit" or the empty tuple. It's basically an object with no contents, behavior, or particular meaning, useful for representing "nothing". It's a solid thing that is never a surprise, unlike undefined or other languages' nulls, which are holes in the language or errors waiting to happen.
You might argue that it's a value and not a function, but Haskell doesn't really differentiate the two anyway:
Is
valuea value, or is it a function that takes no arguments? There's not really a difference, Haskell handles them both the same way: by lazily replacing anything matching the pattern on the left side of the equation with the right side of the equation at runtime.Mostly a great comment, but I wouldn't compare unit to null, it's more like the void type.