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http://www.erlang.org/news/35 mentioned that this will be documented, but I can't find it in the documentation.

1 Answer 1

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A "tuple module" is a tuple with two elements, the name of a module and a list of extra arguments. For example:

{my_module, [foo, bar]}

Such a tuple can be used instead of a module name in function calls. In this case, the function being called will get the tuple in question as an additional argument at the end of the argument list:

3> Module = {lists, [[foo]]}.
{lists,[[foo]]}
4> Module:append([bar]).
[bar|{lists,[[foo]]}]

This call is equivalent to:

7> lists:append([bar], {lists, [[foo]]}).
[bar|{lists,[[foo]]}]

Tuple modules are kept for backwards compatibility, as they were the implementation mechanism for parameterised modules, which were removed from the language in R16.

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  • 2
    hum, I was expecting [foo, bar] as the end result
    – Isac
    Commented Jun 6, 2013 at 14:28
  • 1
    Me too, thus my choice of function for testing :)
    – legoscia
    Commented Jun 6, 2013 at 14:43
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    Attention for example! Standard library not suit for this calling, because last argument alwasy the whole tuple with module qualification, which not expected by std modules as lists etc. Arguments not extracted for compiler consider arity. This can be useful with new modules like this: github.com/comtihon/mongodb-erlang. Commented Sep 3, 2015 at 13:28

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