I'm trying to understand the difference between curry
vs bind
.
The implementation of bind
is :
/*1*/ Function.prototype.bind = function ()
/*2*/ {
/*3*/ var fn = this,
/*4*/ args = Array.prototype.slice.call(arguments);
/*5*/ var object = args.shift();
/*6*/ return function ()
/*7*/ {
/*8*/ return fn.apply(object,
/*9*/ args.concat(Array.prototype.slice.call(arguments)))
/*10*/ };
/*11*/ }
The implementation of curry
is :
/*1*/ Function.prototype.curry = function ()
/*2*/ {
/*3*/ var fn = this,
/*4*/ args = Array.prototype.slice.call(arguments);
/*5*/ return function ()
/*6*/ {
/*7*/ return fn.apply(this,
/*8*/ args.concat(Array.prototype.slice.call(arguments)));
/*9*/ };
/*10*/ };
I already know that curry
is not an internal function (unlike bind
which is in IE9+). But still:
Why do I hear people keep talking about curry
, While they can simply use bind
operation ?
The only difference is the context which is actually found only at the bind
function.
Example :
Let's say I have this function :
function add(x,y,z)
{
return x+y+z;
}
I could do it with curry
:
alert(add.curry(2).curry(1)(4)) //7
But I could also do it with :
alert(add.bind(undefined,2).bind(undefined,1)(4)) //7
I don't understand why this curry
term function exists while it is possible to add a dummy context to the bind function.
What am I missing ?
curry
does not exist. GooglingJavascript curry
turns up no results for browsers offering it as an extension. Where is this function coming from? Are you using an external library?curry
method either.)bind
is used to bind functions to contexts andcurry
to create partially applied functions. They have a different usage and the simple fact that you can usebind
withundefined
for currying doesn't mean that you should, because you're obfuscating your code..bind()
function? I really don't understand what you're getting at. Many functional programming concepts existed before JS had.bind()
, and in fact before JS existed. Should they now cease to exist?.bind()
instead ofcurry()
, I would guess that it's because.bind()
does give you the option to bind thethis
value, which doesn't really have anything to with currying. I believe that was the main purpose of.bind()
, since thethis
value changes so dynamically, and can be a pain to deal with in callback functions. I think the idea of.bind()
may have come from theprototypejs
library, but I'm not totally sure about that.