
golang-samber-mo
PopularMonadic types for Golang using samber/mo — Option, Result, Either, Future, IO, Task, and State types for type-safe nullable values, error handling, and functional composition with pipeline sub-packages. Apply when using or adopting samber/mo, when the codebase imports `github.com/samber/mo`, or when considering functional programming patterns as a safety design for Golang.
"Monadic types for Golang using samber/mo — Option, Result, Either, Future, IO, Task, and State types for type-safe nullable values, error handling, and functional composition with pipeline sub-packages. Apply when using or adopting samber/mo, when the codebase imports `github.com/samber/mo`, or when considering functional programming patterns as a safety design for Golang."
Persona: You are a Go engineer bringing functional programming safety to Go. You use monads to make impossible states unrepresentable — nil checks become type constraints, error handling becomes composable pipelines.
Thinking mode: Use ultrathink when designing multi-step Option/Result/Either pipelines. Wrong type choice creates unnecessary wrapping/unwrapping that defeats the purpose of monads.
samber/mo — Monads and Functional Abstractions for Go
Go 1.18+ library providing type-safe monadic types with zero dependencies. Inspired by Scala, Rust, and fp-ts.
Official Resources:
This skill is not exhaustive. Please refer to library documentation and code examples for more information. Context7 can help as a discoverability platform. For Go package docs, versions, symbols, and known vulnerabilities, → See samber/cc-skills-golang@golang-pkg-go-dev skill.
go get github.com/samber/mo
For an introduction to functional programming concepts and why monads are valuable in Go, see Monads Guide.
Core Types at a Glance
| Type | Purpose | Think of it as... |
|---|---|---|
Option[T] |
Value that may be absent | Rust's Option, Java's Optional |
Result[T] |
Operation that may fail | Rust's Result<T, E>, replaces (T, error) |
Either[L, R] |
Value of one of two types | Scala's Either, TypeScript discriminated union |
EitherX[L, R] |
Value of one of X types | Scala's Either, TypeScript discriminated union |
Future[T] |
Async value not yet available | JavaScript Promise |
IO[T] |
Lazy synchronous side effect | Haskell's IO |
Task[T] |
Lazy async computation | fp-ts Task |
State[S, A] |
Stateful computation | Haskell's State monad |
Option[T] — Nullable Values Without nil
Represents a value that is either present (Some) or absent (None). Eliminates nil pointer risks at the type level.
import "github.com/samber/mo"
name := mo.Some("Alice") // Option[string] with value
empty := mo.None[string]() // Option[string] without value
fromPtr := mo.PointerToOption(ptr) // nil pointer -> None
// Safe extraction
name.OrElse("Anonymous") // "Alice"
empty.OrElse("Anonymous") // "Anonymous"
// Transform if present, skip if absent
upper := name.Map(func(s string) (string, bool) {
return strings.ToUpper(s), true
})
Key methods: Some, None, Get, MustGet, OrElse, OrEmpty, Map, FlatMap, Match, ForEach, ToPointer, IsPresent, IsAbsent.
Option implements json.Marshaler/Unmarshaler, sql.Scanner, driver.Valuer — use it directly in JSON structs and database models.
For full API reference, see Option Reference.
Result[T] — Error Handling as Values
Represents success (Ok) or failure (Err). Equivalent to Either[error, T] but specialized for Go's error pattern.
// Wrap Go's (value, error) pattern
result := mo.TupleToResult(os.ReadFile("config.yaml"))
// Same-type transform — errors short-circuit automatically
upper := mo.Ok("hello").Map(func(s string) (string, error) {
return strings.ToUpper(s), nil
})
// Ok("HELLO")
// Extract with fallback
val := upper.OrElse("default")
Go limitation: Direct methods (.Map, .FlatMap) cannot change the type parameter — Result[T].Map returns Result[T], not Result[U]. Go methods cannot introduce new type parameters. For type-changing transforms (e.g. Result[[]byte] to Result[Config]), use sub-package functions or mo.Do:
import "github.com/samber/mo/result"
// Type-changing pipeline: []byte -> Config -> ValidConfig
parsed := result.Pipe2(
mo.TupleToResult(os.ReadFile("config.yaml")),
result.Map(func(data []byte) Config { return parseConfig(data) }),
result.FlatMap(func(cfg Config) mo.Result[ValidConfig] { return validate(cfg) }),
)
Key methods: Ok, Err, Errf, TupleToResult, Try, Get, MustGet, OrElse, Map, FlatMap, MapErr, Match, ForEach, ToEither, IsOk, IsError.
For full API reference, see Result Reference.
Either[L, R] — Discriminated Union of Two Types
Represents a value that is one of two possible types. Unlike Result, neither side implies success or failure — both are valid alternatives.
// API that returns either cached data or fresh data
func fetchUser(id string) mo.Either[CachedUser, FreshUser] {
if cached, ok := cache.Get(id); ok {
return mo.Left[CachedUser, FreshUser](cached)
}
return mo.Right[CachedUser, FreshUser](db.Fetch(id))
}
// Pattern match
result := fetchUser("user-123")
result.Match(
func(cached CachedUser) mo.Either[CachedUser, FreshUser] { /* use cached */ },
func(fresh FreshUser) mo.Either[CachedUser, FreshUser] { /* use fresh */ },
)
When to use Either vs Result: Use Result[T] when one path is an error. Use Either[L, R] when both paths are valid alternatives (cached vs fresh, left vs right, strategy A vs B).
Either3[T1, T2, T3], Either4, and Either5 extend this to 3-5 type variants.
For full API reference, see Either Reference.
Do Notation — Imperative Style with Monadic Safety
mo.Do wraps imperative code in a Result, catching panics from MustGet() calls:
result := mo.Do(func() int {
// MustGet panics on None/Err — Do catches it as Result error
a := mo.Some(21).MustGet()
b := mo.Ok(2).MustGet()
return a * b // 42
})
// result is Ok(42)
result := mo.Do(func() int {
val := mo.None[int]().MustGet() // panics
return val
})
// result is Err("no such element")
Do notation bridges imperative Go style with monadic safety — write straight-line code, get automatic error propagation.
Pipeline Sub-Packages vs Direct Chaining
samber/mo provides two ways to compose operations:
Direct methods (.Map, .FlatMap) — work when the output type equals the input type:
opt := mo.Some(42)
doubled := opt.Map(func(v int) (int, bool) {
return v * 2, true
}) // Option[int]
Sub-package functions (option.Map, result.Map) — required when the output type differs from input:
import "github.com/samber/mo/option"
// int -> string type change: use sub-package Map
strOpt := option.Map(func(v int) string {
return fmt.Sprintf("value: %d", v)
})(mo.Some(42)) // Option[string]
Pipe functions (option.Pipe3, result.Pipe3) — chain multiple type-changing transformations readably:
import "github.com/samber/mo/option"
result := option.Pipe3(
mo.Some(42),
option.Map(func(v int) string { return strconv.Itoa(v) }),
option.Map(func(s string) []byte { return []byte(s) }),
option.FlatMap(func(b []byte) mo.Option[string] {
if len(b) > 0 { return mo.Some(string(b)) }
return mo.None[string]()
}),
)
Rule of thumb: Use direct methods for same-type transforms. Use sub-package functions + pipes when types change across steps.
For detailed pipeline API reference, see Pipelines Reference.
Common Patterns
JSON API responses with Option
type UserResponse struct {
Name string `json:"name"`
Nickname mo.Option[string] `json:"nickname"` // omits null gracefully
Bio mo.Option[string] `json:"bio"`
}
Database nullable columns
type User struct {
ID int
Email string
Phone mo.Option[string] // implements sql.Scanner + driver.Valuer
}
err := row.Scan(&u.ID, &u.Email, &u.Phone)
Wrapping existing Go APIs
// Convert map lookup to Option
func MapGet[K comparable, V any](m map[K]V, key K) mo.Option[V] {
return mo.TupleToOption(m[key]) // m[key] returns (V, bool)
}
Uniform extraction with Fold
mo.Fold works uniformly across Option, Result, and Either via the Foldable interface:
str := mo.Fold[error, int, string](
mo.Ok(42), // works with Option, Result, or Either
func(v int) string { return fmt.Sprintf("got %d", v) },
func(err error) string { return "failed" },
)
// "got 42"
Best Practices
- Prefer
OrElseoverMustGet—MustGetpanics on absent/error values; use it only insidemo.Doblocks where panics are caught, or when you are certain the value exists - Use
TupleToResultat API boundaries — convert Go's(T, error)toResult[T]at the boundary, then chain withMap/FlatMapinside your domain logic - Use
Result[T]for errors,Either[L, R]for alternatives — Result is specialized for success/failure; Either is for two valid types - Option for nullable fields, not zero values —
Option[string]distinguishes "absent" from "empty string"; use plainstringwhen empty string is a valid value - Chain, don't nest —
result.Map(...).FlatMap(...).OrElse(default)reads left-to-right; avoid nested if/else patterns when monadic chaining is cleaner - Use sub-package pipes for multi-step type transformations — when 3+ steps each change the type,
option.Pipe3(...)is more readable than nested function calls
For advanced types (Future, IO, Task, State), see Advanced Types Reference.
If you encounter a bug or unexpected behavior in samber/mo, open an issue at https://github.com/samber/mo/issues.
Cross-References
- -> See
samber/cc-skills-golang@golang-samber-loskill for functional collection transforms (Map, Filter, Reduce on slices) that compose with mo types - -> See
samber/cc-skills-golang@golang-error-handlingskill for idiomatic Go error handling patterns - -> See
samber/cc-skills-golang@golang-safetyskill for nil-safety and defensive Go coding - -> See
samber/cc-skills-golang@golang-databaseskill for database access patterns - -> See
samber/cc-skills-golang@golang-design-patternsskill for functional options and other Go patterns
You Might Also Like
Related Skills

receiving-code-review
Use when receiving code review feedback, before implementing suggestions, especially if feedback seems unclear or technically questionable - requires technical rigor and verification, not performative agreement or blind implementation
obra
requesting-code-review
Use when completing tasks, implementing major features, or before merging to verify work meets requirements
obra
hyperframes-animation
All animation knowledge for HyperFrames — atomic motion rules, multi-phase scene blueprints, scene transitions, broader motion-design techniques, AND the seven runtime adapters (GSAP default, plus Lottie, Three.js, Anime.js, CSS keyframes, Web Animations API, TypeGPU). Use for any motion or animation task: pick 2-4 rules and compose, or load a blueprint, or look up runtime-specific API (e.g. GSAP eases / Lottie player / Three.js mixer). HyperFrames-native: single paused timeline, seek-safe, deterministic.
heygen-com
pr-to-video
turn a GitHub pull request (a PR URL like github.com/<owner>/<repo>/pull/<N>, an <owner>/<repo>#<N> ref, or 'this PR' in a checked-out repo) into a code-change explainer video, up to ~3 min (sweet spot 30-90s) — changelog, feature reveal, fix, or refactor walkthrough, rendered from the diff / commits / files. The input is a CODE CHANGE read via the gh CLI; there is no website capture. Use this skill for a GitHub PR. Do not use it for a product launch/promo (use /product-launch-video), a tour of a real website (use /website-to-video), a topic explainer with no PR (use /faceless-explainer), captions on existing footage (use /embedded-captions), or a short unnarrated motion graphic (use /motion-graphics). If the intent is unclear, route through /hyperframes first.
heygen-com
golang-dependency-injection
Comprehensive guide for dependency injection (DI) in Golang. Covers why DI matters (testability, loose coupling, separation of concerns, lifecycle management), manual constructor injection, and DI library comparison (google/wire, uber-go/dig, uber-go/fx, samber/do). Use this skill when designing service architecture, setting up dependency injection, refactoring tightly coupled code, managing singletons or service factories, or when the user asks about inversion of control, service containers, or wiring dependencies in Go. For a specific DI library, → See `samber/cc-skills-golang@golang-google-wire`, `samber/cc-skills-golang@golang-uber-dig`, `samber/cc-skills-golang@golang-uber-fx`, or `samber/cc-skills-golang@golang-samber-do` skills.
samber
appinsights-instrumentation
Guidance for instrumenting webapps with Azure Application Insights. Provides telemetry patterns, SDK setup, and configuration references. WHEN: how to instrument app, App Insights SDK, telemetry patterns, what is App Insights, Application Insights guidance, instrumentation examples, APM best practices.
microsoft