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Mastering JavaScript Functional Programming

You're reading from   Mastering JavaScript Functional Programming Write clean, robust, and maintainable web and server code using functional JavaScript and TypeScript

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Product type Paperback
Published in Apr 2023
Publisher Packt
ISBN-13 9781804610138
Length 614 pages
Edition 3rd Edition
Languages
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Author (1):
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Federico Kereki Federico Kereki
Author Profile Icon Federico Kereki
Federico Kereki
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Table of Contents (17) Chapters Close

Preface 1. Chapter 1: Becoming Functional – Several Questions 2. Chapter 2: Thinking Functionally – A First Example FREE CHAPTER 3. Chapter 3: Starting Out with Functions – A Core Concept 4. Chapter 4: Behaving Properly – Pure Functions 5. Chapter 5: Programming Declaratively – A Better Style 6. Chapter 6: Producing Functions – Higher-Order Functions 7. Chapter 7: Transforming Functions – Currying and Partial Application 8. Chapter 8: Connecting Functions – Pipelining, Composition, and More 9. Chapter 9: Designing Functions – Recursion 10. Chapter 10: Ensuring Purity – Immutability 11. Chapter 11: Implementing Design Patterns – The Functional Way 12. Chapter 12: Building Better Containers – Functional Data Types 13. Answers to Questions 14. Bibliography
15. Index 16. Other Books You May Enjoy

Transformations

The first set of operations that we are going to consider works on an array and processes it in the base of a function to produce certain results. There are several possible results: a single value with the reduce() operation, a new array with map(), or just about any kind of result with forEach().

Caring about inefficiency

If you google around, you will find some articles declaring that these functions are inefficient because a loop done by hand can be faster. This, while possibly true, is practically irrelevant. Unless your code really suffers from speed problems and you can determine that the slowness derives from using these HOFs, trying to avoid them using longer code, with a higher probability of bugs, simply doesn’t make much sense.

Let’s start by considering the preceding list of functions in order, beginning with the most general of all, which, as we’ll see, can even be used to emulate the rest of the transformations in this chapter...

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