Monad package:hedgehog

The Monad class defines the basic operations over a monad, a concept from a branch of mathematics known as category theory. From the perspective of a Haskell programmer, however, it is best to think of a monad as an abstract datatype of actions. Haskell's do expressions provide a convenient syntax for writing monadic expressions. Instances of Monad should satisfy the following: Furthermore, the Monad and Applicative operations should relate as follows: The above laws imply: and that pure and (<*>) satisfy the applicative functor laws. The instances of Monad for lists, Maybe and IO defined in the Prelude satisfy these laws.
Class of monads which can generate input data for tests.
When a value is bound in do-notation, the pattern on the left hand side of <- might not match. In this case, this class provides a function to recover. A Monad without a MonadFail instance may only be used in conjunction with pattern that always match, such as newtypes, tuples, data types with only a single data constructor, and irrefutable patterns (~pat). Instances of MonadFail should satisfy the following law: fail s should be a left zero for >>=,
fail s >>= f  =  fail s
If your Monad is also MonadPlus, a popular definition is
fail _ = mzero
fail s should be an action that runs in the monad itself, not an exception (except in instances of MonadIO). In particular, fail should not be implemented in terms of error.