You probably got your answer already, but just to reiterate:
If we have
add x y = x + y
then we can say the following:
add = \ x y -> x + y
add 3 = \ y -> 3 + y
add 3 5 = 3 + 5 = 8
You ask "how can max 3
calculate anything?", and the answer is "it can't". It just gives you another function. This function can do something when you call it, but you don't "get an answer" as such until all the arguments have been supplied. Until then, you just get functions.
Most of the time, this is just a useful syntactic shortcut. For example, you can write
uppercase :: String -> String
uppercase = map toUpper
instead of having to say
uppercase xs = map toUpper xs
Notice that if map
had its arguments the other way around, we wouldn't be able to do this (you can only curry away the last argument, not the _first), so it can be important to think about which order you define your functions' arguments.
I say "most of the time" because this is more than syntax sugar. There are several places in the language where you can handle functions with different numbers of arguments polymorphically because of currying. Every function either returns an answer, or another function. If you think of it like a linked list (which either contains the next item of data or the end-of-list marker), you can see how this lets you recursively process functions.
So what the heck do I mean by that? Well, for example, QuickCheck can test functions with any number of arguments (provided there's a way to auto-generate test data for each argument). This is possible because function types are curried. Every function either returns another function, or a result. If you think about it like a linked list, you can imagine QuickCheck recursively iterating over the function until no more arguments are left.
The following code snippet may or may not explain the idea:
class Arbitrary a where
autogenerate :: RandomGenerator -> a
instance Arbitrary Int
instance Arbitrary Char
...
class Testable t where
test t :: RandomGenerator -> Bool
instance Testable Bool where
test rnd b = b
instance (Arbitrary a, Testable t) => Testable (a -> t) where
test rnd f = test $ f (autogenerate rnd)
If we have a function foo :: Int -> Int -> Bool
, then this is Testable
. Why? Well, Bool
is testable, therefore so is Int -> Bool
, and therefore so is Int -> (Int -> Bool)
.
By contrast, each size of tuple is a different size, so you have to write separate functions (or instances) for each and every size of tuple. You can't recursively process tuples, because they don't have a recursive structure.