curriable
Curry any function with placeholder support
Table of contents
Summary
curriable
provides a curry
method that is highly performant with a small footprint (582 bytes minified+gzipped). You can call the method with any combination of parameters (one at a time, all at once, or any number in between), and placeholders are supported.
If fn
is the curried function and _
is the placeholder value, the following are all equivalent:
fn(1)(2)(3)
fn(1)(2, 3)
fn(1, 2)(3)
fn(1, 2, 3)
fn(_, 2, 3)(1)
fn(_, _, 3)(1)(2)
fn(_, _, 3)(1, 2)
fn(_, 2)(1)(3)
fn(_, 2)(1, 3)
fn(_, 2)(_, 3)(1)
Usage
You can use the default import:
import curry from "curriable";
const fn = curry((a, b, c) => [a, b, c]);
console.log(fn("a", curry.__, "c")("b"));
const original = curry.uncurry(fn);
console.log(original("a"));
Or the named imports:
import { __, curry, uncurry } from "curriable";
const fn = curry((a, b, c) => [a, b, c]);
console.log(fn("a", __, "c")("b"));
const original = uncurry(fn);
console.log(original("a"));
API
curry
Curry the fn
provided for any combination of arguments passed, until all required arguments have been passed.
import { curry } from 'curriable';
function curry<Fn extends (...args: any[]) => any>(
fn: Fn,
arity: number = fn.length
) => Curried<Fn>;
arity
defaults to be the length provided by fn.length
, but be aware this can cause unusual behavior with default parameters or use of rest parameters. See the documentation on Function.length for more details.
uncurry
import { uncurry } from 'curriable';
Get the underlying standard method that was curried using `curry`.
function uncurry<Fn extends (...args: any[]) => any>(
fn: Curried<Fn>
) => Fn;
isPlaceholder
import { isPlaceholder } from 'curriable';
Is the value passed a `curriable` placeholder.
function isPlaceholder(value: any): value is Placeholder
Rest parameters
console.log((...args) =>{}.length);
When using rest with curried functions, you should pass a second parameter to explicitly declare the correct arity
:
const fn = (...args) => [a, b, c];
const curried = curry(fn, 3);
console.log(curried("a")("b")("c"));
Default parameters
console.log(function(a, b = 1, c) {}.length);
Default parameters are very rare use-case with curried functions, but it is possible to trigger them if you declare an explicit arity
and explicitly pass undefined
for that parameter:
const fn = (a, b = 1, c) => [a, b, c];
const curried = curry(fn, 3);
console.log(curried("a")(undefined)("c"));
Yes, this is weird, but it is very difficult (impossible?) to distinguish between a parameter being undefined through not being called yet in the curry chain vs being undefined by not being provided an explicit value. Explicitly passing undefined
provides that distinction.
Benchmarks
All values provided are the number of operations per second (ops/sec) calculated by the Benchmark suite. The same function was curried and tested passing each parameter individually, passing all at once, and using placeholders.
Benchmarks were performed on an i7 8-core Arch Linux laptop with 16GB of memory using NodeJS version 10.15.0
.
Passing each parameter in curried calls
curriable | 4,052,206 |
ramda | 2,423,105 |
lodash | 241,736 |
Passing all parameters in one call
curriable | 18,106,685 |
ramda | 10,718,796 |
lodash | 9,052,257 |
Using placeholder parameters in curried calls
curriable | 4,821,329 |
ramda | 2,963,699 |
lodash | 336,687 |
Development
Standard stuff, clone the repo and npm install
dependencies. The npm scripts available:
benchmark
=> run the benchmark suite pitting curriable
against other libraries in common use-cases
build
=> run rollup
to build dist
files
clean
=> run rimraf
on the dist
folder
dev
=> run webpack dev server to run example app (playground!)
lint
=> runs tslint
against all files in the src
folder
lint:fix
=> runs lint
, fixing any errors if possible
prepublishOnly
=> run lint
, typecheck
, test:coverage
, clean
, and dist
release
=> run release-it
for standard versions (requires global installation of release-it
)
release:beta
=> run release-it
for beta versions (requires global installation of release-it
)
test
=> run jest
test functions
test:coverage
=> run test
, but with coverage checker
test:watch
=> run test
, but with persistent watcher
typecheck
=> run tsc
on all code in src