auto-curry
v0.2.1
Published
Supercharge your functions by giving them the ability to auto-curry
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auto-curry
Supercharge your functions by giving them the ability to auto-curry.
Note: This library actually uses partial application internally and not currying. So, yes, the name is a misnomer. It is the result of my incorrect understanding of the concepts when I wrote the library. It is still perfectly usable and is used in production.
Installation
npm install auto-curry --save
Usage
In node
, you can just require('auto-curry')
.
In the browser, you can use build/auto-curry.min.js
- with
require.js
,browserify
etc - directly by using
window.autoCurry
Node
var cu = require('auto-curry');
var add = cu(function (a, b) {
return a + b;
});
var messWithThis = cu(function(v){
this.a.push(v);
return ++v;
});
var map = cu(function map(fn, list) {
var self = arguments[2] ? arguments[2] : this;
try {
return list.map(fn, self);
}
catch (e) {
return [].map.call(list, fn, self);
}
});
var x = {a: []};
console.log(map(add(1), [1, 2, 3])); //[2, 3, 4]
console.log(map(messWithThis, [1,2,3], x)); //[2, 3, 4]
console.log(x.a); //[1, 2, 3]
Browser
var cu = window.autoCurry; //using it off the global
var add = cu(function (a, b) {
return a + b;
});
var messWithThis = cu(function(v){
this.a.push(v);
return ++v;
});
var map = cu(function map(fn, list) {
console.log(arguments[2]);
var self = arguments[2] ? arguments[2] : this;
try {
return list.map(fn, self);
}
catch (e) {
return [].map.call(list, fn, self);
}
});
var x = {a: []};
console.log(map(add(1), [1, 2, 3])); //[2, 3, 4]
console.log(map(messWithThis, [1,2,3], x)); //[2, 3, 4]
console.log(x.a); //[1, 2, 3]
License
Changelog
0.2.1
- Now, if the function passed to
auto-curry
has an arity of one, the function itself is returned. Earlier this was only for zero arity functions.