Questions tagged [partial-application]

Partial application is a programming technique for passing less than the full number of arguments to a function, in order to yield a new function that can be used later. It is particularly common in functional languages that support currying.

partial-application
Filter by
Sorted by
Tagged with
2 votes
2 answers
487 views

How to dynamically add method to class with `functools.partial()`

I am having trouble with the right incantation to get a dynamic method added to a class using functools.partial in the following situation. The following has a Creator class to which I want to add a ...
2 votes
1 answer
111 views

Typo in Learn you a Haskell for Great Good? [closed]

In Type Synonyms we read Just like we can partially apply functions to get new functions, we can partially apply type parameters and get new type constructors from them. How can a parameter be ...
0 votes
1 answer
82 views

Varargs function argument of generic partial application does not type check

I have the following combinator that converts a mutli-argument function in one that can be partially applied: type Tuple = any[]; const partial = <A extends Tuple, B extends Tuple, C> (f: (.....
0 votes
1 answer
122 views

Refactor functions to use currying

I have three functions that I would like to refactor using currying but I am struggling get my head around functions that return functions. I am trying to break down and design the curried functions ...
6 votes
1 answer
154 views

Understanding Type Projection

Taken from typelevel/kind-projector, what's the distinction between: // partially-applied type named "IntOrA" type IntOrA[A] = Either[Int, A] and // type projection implementing the same type ...
3 votes
2 answers
291 views

Dynamically adding builtin methods to point to a property's built-ins [duplicate]

I have a couple classes and a function: from functools import partial def fn(other, self, name): print(f"calling {name} with {other}") func = getattr(self.a, name) return func(other) ...
1 vote
3 answers
126 views

How to make this function more reusable/specific/better design?

I wrote this function below which transforms the passed array of products by product type and currency type function getProductsByCurrency(products, type, exchangeRate = 1) { var ...
0 votes
1 answer
172 views

How to leverage power of TextWriterFormat for printfn style in combination with ConditionalAttribute which requires unit result

I set myself to creating a trace function that behaves like sprintf or printfn, but is disabled (JIT removes it on call site) for Release builds by using the ConditionalAttribute. Result so far: I ...
0 votes
1 answer
46 views

Is it possible for a partially applied function to call its partially applied self?

I've started playing with Akka and have found that most of my actors have part immutable state and part mutable state. Both could be merged into a State case class which could then be copied on solely ...
7 votes
1 answer
180 views

Partial application versus pattern matching: why do these Haskell functions behave differently?

I'm trying to understand something about Haskell functions. First, here is a Fibonacci function defined in the typical "slow" way (i.e. recursive with no memoization, and no infinite-list tricks) ...
3 votes
1 answer
83 views

Partial functions keeping their signature

We can use purrr::partial to create partial functions: f <- function(x, y) { print(x) print(y) return(invisible()) } ff <- purrr::partial(f, y = 1) ff(2) #> [1] 2 #> [1] 1 ...
2 votes
3 answers
110 views

How can I avoid accidental partial application in a compact way?

I have a side-effecting function, f : int -> string -> unit which I am calling using f 1 "hi". To make sure I get an error in the call site if the function is changed to need more arguments, I ...
10 votes
4 answers
1k views

Concise syntax for partial in Clojure

Learning Haskell some time ago, I felt in love with pointfree notation and especially convenient partial function application - just supply args you know. In Clojure, I have partial all the time. I ...
4 votes
1 answer
410 views

Why does the partial application `foldr id` typecheck?

In Haskell, I don’t understand why the partial application foldr id typechecks. Relevant types are > :t foldr id foldr id :: a -> [a -> a] -> a > :t foldr foldr :: (a -> b -> b)...
3 votes
1 answer
145 views

kind-projector returns strange results

I have these types: SomeTypeClass A higher kinded type which has one type parameter of kind * => * => * trait SomeTypeClass[P[_, _]] { def test[F[_], S, T, A, B](f: (A => F[B]) => S => ...
41 votes
3 answers
14k views

functools.partial wants to use a positional argument as a keyword argument

So I am trying to understand partial: import functools def f(x,y) : print x+y g0 = functools.partial( f, 3 ) g0(1) 4 # Works as expected In: g1 = functools.partial( f, y=3 ) g1(1) 4 # ...
0 votes
1 answer
172 views

reasonml type higher order function

given the following module the compiler raises an error 41 │ }; 42 │ 43 │ module TestB = { 44 │ let minFn = (a, b) => a < b ? a : b; . │ ... 54 │ let max = reduceList(maxFn); ...
1 vote
0 answers
86 views

Can I rewrite this code to avoid the F# error

I have the following code in F# live version at https://repl.it/repls/CarefulGiganticExtraction let inline tryParse text = let mutable r = Unchecked.defaultof<_> (^a : (static member ...
4 votes
2 answers
11k views

Using map with function that has multiple arguments

Is it possible to use map with a function that takes multiple arguments? I want to use map's second and third arguments repeatedly as the function's arguments. As in mapF x y z = map (f y z) [1, 2, ...
5 votes
2 answers
623 views

Performant way to partially apply in Python?

I am looking for a way to partially apply functions in python that is simple to understand, readable, resusable and as little error prone to coder mistakes as possible. Most of all I want the style to ...
0 votes
3 answers
392 views

Is a section the result of currying?

In Programming in Haskell by Hutton In general, if # is an operator, then expressions of the form (#), (x #), and (# y) for arguments x and y are called sections, ...
1 vote
1 answer
835 views

How does the outermost evaluation strategy evaluate partial application of a function and application of a curried function

Programming in Haskell by Hutton says When evaluating an expression, in what order should the reductions be performed? One common strategy, known as innermost ...
6 votes
5 answers
3k views

Partial application in Haskell with multiple arguments

Given some function f(x1,x2,x3,..,xN) it is often useful to apply it partially in several places. For example, for N=3 we could define g(x)=f(1,x,3). However, the standard partial application in ...
5 votes
2 answers
2k views

Haskell "Non type-variable argument in the constraint"

I've created a list of partially applied functions in my REPL like so: listOfPartiallyAppliedFunctions = map (*) [1..100] I would then like to create the list of results from completing the function ...
0 votes
2 answers
148 views

Not getting the same result from a partial application as with an infix opperatior "(%) x y <> x % y -> wtf"

I've just been doing some validation on value to see it is a product of three. Great use the modulus function. I want to pipe to it. Great use a partial application. But apparently not. This is ...
2 votes
1 answer
61 views

Haskell: Question about Partial Application

I am reading the book 'Learn You a Haskell for Great Good!' by Miran Lipovaca and learning about higher-order functions in Chapter 5. One of the examples involves the following function: applyTwice :...
2 votes
2 answers
682 views

What is the difference between the reader monad and a partial function in Clojure?

Leonardo Borges has put together a fantastic presentation on Monads in Clojure. In it he describes the reader monad in Clojure using the following code: ;; Reader Monad (def reader-m {:return (fn [...
7 votes
1 answer
1k views

Partial function application with generics

I'm working with an Observer API (ObserverSet) which have the following function : public func add<T: AnyObject>(object: T, _ f: T -> Parameters -> Void) -> ObserverSetEntry<...
7 votes
2 answers
2k views

Haskell recursive function example with foldr

I've taken up learning Haskell again, after a short hiatus and I am currently trying to get a better understanding of how recursion and lambda expressions work in Haskell. In this: YouTube video, ...
2 votes
2 answers
95 views

Need help in understanding types (based on curry)

curry f a b = f(a,b) I thought: the curry function takes function f a b and returns f(a, b), so i thought the type is: (a -> b -> c) -> (a, b) -> c so why the type is reversed?: ((a, ...
2 votes
0 answers
908 views

Decorators and partial functions

I'm trying to learn decorators and partial, and I think I make some sense. I understand decorators as a way to add additional functionality to an object by passing in the arguments from the function ...
7 votes
1 answer
423 views

Partially applied type lambda in Scala with kind projector

Consider the following type definition: trait LiftF[F[_], G[_]] { def liftF[A](fa: F[A]): G[A] } When providing a requirement for an implicit of this type in context bounds (using kind projector ...
0 votes
1 answer
80 views

How to reason about partially applied method chaining

I am trying to understand how to reason about the types for partial applied method chaining . I do not understand why : :t (+)(+2) is (a->a)->a->a or why: :t (+)(+) is (a->a->a)->a-&...
5 votes
1 answer
2k views

Partial function application in Kotlin

I am having trouble with syntax for partial function application. The following code works fine, and it outputs: two-three-four import kotlin.coroutines.experimental.* inline fun <T> Iterable&...
8 votes
4 answers
4k views

Partial function application with the original docstring in Python?

For partial function application, I know there are several ways to do that in Python. However, they seems not to preserve the original function's docstring. Take functools.partial as example: from ...
3 votes
3 answers
459 views

How to partially apply a function with desired order in Elm?

Suppose I have a function that takes 3 parameters as input. How to partially apply this function in Elm so it takes first and last parameters and waits for the second parameter to return the final ...
2 votes
4 answers
1k views

How does an a function that increments a value work?

I'm trying to learn haskell after years of OOP. I'm reading Happy Haskell. It provides this code: plus :: Int -> Int -> Int plus x y = x + y plus' :: Int -> Int -> Int plus' = \x -> \...
8 votes
2 answers
2k views

What are the rules to govern underscore to define anonymous function?

I am using _ as placeholder for creating anonymous function, and the problem is I cannot predict how Scala is going to transform my code. More precisely, it mistakenly determines how "large" the ...
4 votes
1 answer
146 views

Haskell partial function application with $

I'm new to Haskell and looking at a simple example of using function application with $. It seems straightforward - it takes a function and applies it to a value. So this makes sense: > (+3) $ 2 ...
0 votes
1 answer
3k views

How to have Bash scripts reference local files

My specific problem My goal is to provide a command-line utility for converting PowerPoint files to PDFs. I have tried solutions that use unoconv, but they don't do the conversion properly. I found a ...
1 vote
2 answers
155 views

cleanest partial application of subtraction operator

If I want a function that subtracts an int argument from the number 2, I can do let two_minus = (-) 2 But what if I want a function that subtracts 2 from an int argument? In Haskell, I can do let ...
0 votes
1 answer
2k views

How do I express partial function application in Typescript 3.x in a type-safe way?

I'm working on an Angular codebase that does some standard postprocessing on most API calls. This is done in a service class that wraps HttpClient.get() etc. in methods that pipe the returned ...
0 votes
1 answer
64 views

Partially apply a function and dynamically call that function at runtime

Using F#, if I partially apply a function like this: let sleep x = Async.Sleep x |> Async.RunSynchronously let log date message= printfn "%s %s" date message let getDate = DateTime.Now.ToString() ...
0 votes
2 answers
78 views

How does Haskell evaluate this signature?

ggt_euklid :: Nat1 -> (Nat1 -> Nat1) I am trying to learn partial application, I know that in this case, if the parentheses would be left out, I would get the same result, but I do not know how ...
95 votes
3 answers
5k views

Ordering of parameters to make use of currying

I have twice recently refactored code in order to change the order of parameters because there was too much code where hacks like flip or \x -> foo bar x 42 were happening. When designing a ...
1 vote
3 answers
133 views

Can't understand the result of the high-order function invocation provided with not partially applied function as an argument

I have a high-order function declaration to apply a function given as an argument twice: twice :: (a -> a) -> a -> a twice f x = f (f x) The confusion comes from this GHCi session: *Main&...
1 vote
3 answers
51 views

Partial application to a specific parameter slot

Hello i want to know if it is possible to provide a parameter to a method at a specific position for further using point-free-notation: readData::Text->[Int] readData =catMaybes . maybeValues ...
1 vote
1 answer
661 views

Python - How to change a lambda function to partial function? [duplicate]

The lambda function is: lambda x: x.split('=') the partial function would look something like: str.split('=')
0 votes
1 answer
42 views

How to call partial functions

I have this sample code(a .js library needs to be consumed) for formatting the date. Have never used partial functions before so not quite sure how to use it. How does one call them? Here is the ...
0 votes
1 answer
167 views

point-free style and partially applied functions

In Haskell there are two concepts that doesn't look like they are the same, but I don't understand the difference. They are "point-free style" and "partially applied functions". For point-free styles ...