4

I'm looking for a clean, idiomatic way to do a "backwards reduce" in Clojure.

I've got

(def fns '(fn1 fn2 fn3))
(def val 42)

I'd like to obtain (fn3 (fn2 (fn1 val))), and I'm not picky about the order. So I'd like to consecutively apply a sequence of functions to a value, rather than consecutively a sequence of values to a function.

Suggestions? Thanks!

5 Answers 5

7

This is just reduce. Remember functions are objects too. Also, you are still applying your functions in order f1, then f2, etc. Don't be confused with the fact that it reads (f4 (f3 ...

So just use a regular reduce.

(reduce #(%2 %1) val functions) 
3
  • Thanks very much! BTW, I noticed that (def fns '(fn1 fn2 fn3)) doesn't work here, it's necessary to use (def fns [#'fn1 #'fn2 #'fn3])
    – Dan
    Nov 6, 2009 at 21:13
  • caffeine.cc: A quoted list gives you symbols rather than the values (functions) the symbols evaluate to; that's the whole point of quoting something. You could've done (list fn1 fn2 fn3) or [fn1 fn2 fn3]; the vector version is more idiomatic in Clojure. Nov 6, 2009 at 23:32
  • +1 I think this is actually the best solution, since it is both short and because reduce tends to have better performance than most other approaches (it's pretty heavily optimized in Clojure)
    – mikera
    Mar 5, 2011 at 13:29
5

Yet another way to think about it is as a composition of functions:

user=> ((apply comp [inc dec inc]) 42)
43
3
  • 1
    I like this solution, but I think you will have to reverse the collection of functions. ((comp f1 f2 f3) x) evaluates to (f1 (f2 (f3 x))) and the asker wanted it the other way around.
    – Jonas
    Nov 7, 2009 at 5:20
  • Quite right. The question did state: "I'm not picky about the order", which I took to mean either they were commutative or could be arranged either way. However for some functions of course, order is very important ((apply comp [/ +]) 1 2) -> 1/3 ;;; ((apply comp (reverse [/ +])) 1 2) -> 1/2 Nov 7, 2009 at 6:58
  • I really like this solution too, it wound up in my code. Thanks!
    – Dan
    Nov 21, 2009 at 19:05
3

I'm not a very advanced Clojure user either, so the language of the API description tends to look a bit terse and cryptic to me. But given my limited understanding, the "->" macro struck my eye. It "threads" a value x through a series of "forms," which looks to me suspiciously similar to what you're after.

Since it's a macro, I'm not sure if you can use (apply) to push it inside your list of fn's, but I'd give it a shot!

2
2

Simplest way to write it down in Clojure would be:

((comp fn3 fn2 fn1) 42)
1

how about ...

(defn back-reduce
([firstfunction restfunctions val]
    (if (= restfunctions nil)
        (firstfunction val)
        (back-reduce (car restfunctions) (cdr restfunctions) (firstfunction val))  
    )
))
1
  • hmmmm doesn't look like Clojure code since it has "car" and "cdr" :-)
    – mikera
    Mar 5, 2011 at 13:26

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