19

It seems to me that all of these are related. What is the difference?

4
  • 5
    Do you have any example which needs to find an appropriate approach? Your question is quite broad.
    – pad
    Apr 10, 2012 at 15:11
  • 2
    This might fit more the "programmers" SO site.
    – Ramon Snir
    Apr 10, 2012 at 15:19
  • I agree with Pad--this is a fairly open-ended question (Tomas' and Daniel's answers not withstanding). Apr 11, 2012 at 13:13
  • i changed the format of the question Mar 30, 2015 at 16:30

2 Answers 2

60
  • Piping is used to perform a sequence of operations on some value (just like piping in Unix). The input to each function is the output of the previous function. Obviously this requires each function take a single arg.

  • Composition (<< / >>) is similar in that it calls two functions in sequence (i.e., the output of the first is the input to the second) but it returns a function instead of immediately invoking the sequence.

  • Currying creates a new function by applying 1 to N-1 args to a function of N args

So, composition and currying are used to create functions whereas piping is used for invocation. Composition and currying differ in the way they create new functions (by applying args vs chaining).

37

In addition to what Daniel wrote, there is a very close correspondence between piping (the |> and <| operators) and function composition (the >> and << operators).

When you use piping to pass some data to a seqence of functions:

nums |> Seq.filter isOdd
     |> Seq.map square
     |> Seq.sum

... then this is equivalent to passing the input to a function obtained using function composition:

let composed = 
     Seq.filter isOdd
  >> Seq.map square
  >> Seq.sum

composed nums

In practice, this often means that you can replace function declaration that uses piping on the argument with a composition of functions (and use the fact that functions can be used as values). Here is an example:

// Explicit function declaration
foo (fun x -> x |> bar |> goo)

// Equivalent using function composition
foo (bar >> goo)

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