I would like to understand which is the difference between these two programming concepts. The first represents the absence of data type and at the latter the type exists but there is no information. Additionally, I recognize that Unit comes from functional programming theoretical foundation but I still cannot understand what is the usability of the unit primitive (e.g., in an F# program).
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The unit type just makes everything more regular. To an extent you can think of every function in F# as taking a single parameter and returning a single result. Functions that don't need any parameters actually take "unit" as a parameter, and functions that don't return any results return "unit" as a result. This has a variety of advantages; for one, consider how in C# you need both a slew of "Func" delegates to represent functions of various arities that return values, as well as a slew of "Action" delegates that do not return values (because e.g. | |||||||
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In functional programming, we usually speak of mapping inputs to outputs. This literally means mapping an argument to its return value(s). But if something is going to be a function in the mathematical/category-theory sense, it has to return something. A
This applies a particular function In some languages, passing in such a function would break this code (like in C#, where you can't assign This is where the concept of | ||||
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