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When buzzdecafe recently introduced Ramda to the world, there were two distinct groups of responses. Those accustomed to functional techniques -- in Javascript or in other languages -- mostly responded with, "Cool". They may have been excited by it or just casually noting another potential tool, but they understood what it was for. The second group responded with a resounding, "Huh?" To those not
(Japanese, Chinese) Like many of you, I started hearing a lot about functional programming several months ago and I had no idea what it was. It was just a buzzword to me. Since then, Iâve explored the depths of functional programming and I thought Iâd try to help demystify the newcomer who keeps hearing about all this stuff but doesnât know what to make of it. When talking about functional program
Since Chris Okasaki's 1998 book "Purely functional data structures", I haven't seen too many new exciting purely functional data structures appear; I can name just a few: IntMap (also invented by Okasaki in 1998, but not present in that book) Finger trees (and their generalization over monoids) There are also some interesting ways of implementing already known datastructures, such as using "nested
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