--- name: Effect Core description: This skill should be used ANY TIME you're writing TypeScript with Effect, especially when the user asks about "Effect type", "creating effects", "running effects", "Effect.gen", "Effect.succeed", "Effect.fail", "Effect.sync", "Effect.promise", "Effect.tryPromise", "Effect.runPromise", "Effect.runSync", "pipe", "andThen", "flatMap", "map", "Effect basics", or needs to understand the fundamental Effect type and how to create, compose, and run effects. version: 1.0.0 --- # Effect Core ## CRITICAL: You MUST Follow the Code Style Skill **Before writing ANY Effect code, you MUST read and follow the [Code Style](../code-style/SKILL.md) skill ([view on GitHub](https://github.com/andrueandersoncs/claude-skill-effect-ts/blob/main/skills/code-style/SKILL.md)).** This skill covers core APIs and composition only — the Code Style skill defines the mandatory patterns, forbidden anti-patterns, and idiomatic conventions that apply to ALL Effect code you produce. Every code example you generate must conform to those rules. ## Overview Effect is the foundational type in Effect-TS representing a computation that may succeed with value `A`, fail with error `E`, or require context `R`: ```typescript Effect; // Also written as: Effect ``` The key insight: Effects are **descriptions** of programs, not executed code. They must be explicitly run. ## Creating Effects ### From Synchronous Values ```typescript import { Effect } from "effect"; const success = Effect.succeed(42); const failure = Effect.fail(new Error("Something went wrong")); const lazy = Effect.sync(() => { console.log("Computing..."); return Math.random(); }); // Sync that may throw (converts exception to typed error) const mayThrow = Effect.try({ try: () => someLegacyFunction(), catch: (error) => new LegacyError({ cause: error }), }); // For JSON parsing, prefer Schema.parseJson (type-safe and validated) const UserInput = Schema.parseJson( Schema.Struct({ name: Schema.String, value: Schema.Number, }), ); const parsed = Schema.decodeUnknown(UserInput)(userInput); ``` ### From Asynchronous Values ```typescript // From Promise (untyped error) const fromPromise = Effect.promise(() => fetch("/api/data")); // From Promise with typed error const fromPromiseTyped = Effect.tryPromise({ try: () => fetch("/api/data"), catch: (error) => new FetchError({ cause: error }), }); ``` ## Composing Effects ### Sequential Composition with pipe ```typescript import { Effect, pipe } from "effect"; const program = pipe( Effect.succeed(1), Effect.map((n) => n + 1), Effect.flatMap((n) => Effect.succeed(n * 2)), Effect.andThen((n) => Effect.succeed(`Result: ${n}`)), ); ``` ### Generator Syntax (Recommended) The generator syntax (`Effect.gen`) provides cleaner, more readable code: ```typescript const program = Effect.gen(function* () { const a = yield* Effect.succeed(1); const b = yield* Effect.succeed(2); const result = a + b; return `Sum: ${result}`; }); ``` Equivalent to: ```typescript const program = Effect.succeed(1).pipe( Effect.flatMap((a) => Effect.succeed(2).pipe(Effect.flatMap((b) => Effect.succeed(`Sum: ${a + b}`)))), ); ``` ## Running Effects Effects are descriptions that must be run to produce values: ```typescript import { Effect } from "effect"; const program = Effect.succeed(42); const result = await Effect.runPromise(program); const syncResult = Effect.runSync(Effect.succeed(42)); const exit = await Effect.runPromiseExit(program); ``` ### Runtime Methods | Method | Use Case | | ----------------------- | --------------------------------------------- | | `Effect.runPromise` | Async effect → Promise (throws on failure) | | `Effect.runPromiseExit` | Async effect → Promise (never throws) | | `Effect.runSync` | Sync effect → value (throws on async/failure) | | `Effect.runSyncExit` | Sync effect → Exit (throws on async) | ## Key Composition Operators ### map - Transform Success Value ```typescript Effect.succeed(5).pipe(Effect.map((n) => n * 2)); ``` ### flatMap / andThen - Chain Effects ```typescript const getUser = (id: number) => Effect.succeed({ id, name: "Alice" }); const getPosts = (userId: number) => Effect.succeed([{ title: "Post 1" }]); const program = getUser(1).pipe(Effect.flatMap((user) => getPosts(user.id))); ``` ### tap - Side Effects Without Changing Value ```typescript Effect.succeed(42).pipe( Effect.tap((n) => Effect.log(`Got value: ${n}`)), Effect.map((n) => n * 2), ); ``` ### all - Combine Multiple Effects ```typescript // Tuple of effects const tuple = Effect.all([Effect.succeed(1), Effect.succeed("hello"), Effect.succeed(true)]); // Effect<[number, string, boolean], never, never> // Object of effects const obj = Effect.all({ id: Effect.succeed(1), name: Effect.succeed("Alice"), }); // Effect<{ id: number; name: string }, never, never> ``` ## Effect vs Promise Comparison | Promise | Effect | | -------------------------------------- | -------------------------------- | | `new Promise((resolve) => resolve(1))` | `Effect.succeed(1)` | | `Promise.reject(error)` | `Effect.fail(error)` | | `promise.then(f)` | `effect.pipe(Effect.map(f))` | | `promise.then(f)` (f returns Promise) | `effect.pipe(Effect.flatMap(f))` | | `Promise.all([...])` | `Effect.all([...])` | | `await promise` | `yield* effect` (in Effect.gen) | ## Dual APIs Most Effect functions support both "data-first" and "data-last" (pipeable) styles: ```typescript // Data-last (pipeable) - recommended Effect.succeed(1).pipe(Effect.map((n) => n + 1)); // Data-first Effect.map(Effect.succeed(1), (n) => n + 1); ``` ## Best Practices ### Do 1. **Use Effect.gen for sequential code** - More readable than nested flatMaps 2. **Use typed errors** - Always define error types with Schema.TaggedError 3. **Use Schema.parseJson for JSON** - Never use raw JSON.parse() 4. **Prefer data-last (pipeable)** - Consistent with Effect ecosystem ### Don't 1. **Don't mix async/await with Effect** - Use Effect.promise at boundaries only 2. **Don't use try/catch** - Use Effect.try or Effect.tryPromise 3. **Don't throw exceptions** - Use Effect.fail with typed errors 4. **Don't use JSON.parse** - Use Schema.parseJson with a schema **For the complete list of mandatory patterns, forbidden anti-patterns, and idiomatic conventions, see the [Code Style](../code-style/SKILL.md) skill ([GitHub](https://github.com/andrueandersoncs/claude-skill-effect-ts/blob/main/skills/code-style/SKILL.md)).** ## Additional Resources For comprehensive documentation on all Effect APIs, patterns, and advanced usage, consult the full Effect documentation at `${CLAUDE_PLUGIN_ROOT}/references/llms-full.txt`. Search for these sections: - "Effect vs Promise" for migration patterns - "Getting Started" for installation and setup - "Basic Concurrency" for parallel execution - "Dual APIs" for function calling conventions