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Functional Programming in Go

You're reading from   Functional Programming in Go Apply functional techniques in Golang to improve the testability, readability, and security of your code

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Product type Paperback
Published in Mar 2023
Publisher Packt
ISBN-13 9781801811163
Length 248 pages
Edition 1st Edition
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Author (1):
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Dylan Meeus Dylan Meeus
Author Profile Icon Dylan Meeus
Dylan Meeus
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Table of Contents (17) Chapters Close

Preface 1. Part 1: Functional Programming Paradigm Essentials
2. Chapter 1: Introducing Functional Programming FREE CHAPTER 3. Chapter 2: Treating Functions as First-Class Citizens 4. Chapter 3: Higher-Order Functions 5. Chapter 4: Writing Testable Code with Pure Functions 6. Chapter 5: Immutability 7. Part 2: Using Functional Programming Techniques
8. Chapter 6: Three Common Categories of Functions 9. Chapter 7: Recursion 10. Chapter 8: Readable Function Composition with Fluent Programming 11. Part 3: Design Patterns and Functional Programming Libraries
12. Chapter 9: Functional Design Patterns 13. Chapter 10: Concurrency and Functional Programming 14. Chapter 11: Functional Programming Libraries 15. Index 16. Other Books You May Enjoy

Functional design patterns

In the preceding sections of this chapter, we have compared functional and object-oriented design patterns (strategy, decorator, and Dependency Injection/IoC). If we look at the main differences between the functional and object-oriented patterns, it becomes clear that our patterns are achieved through different combinations of functions. We are either using functions as first-class citizens to store them as variables within a struct, or we are using function composition, higher-order functions, anonymous functions, and closures to achieve what would traditionally have been achieved with interfaces and the inheritance of classes.

And this really should be the main takeaway when writing functional code. Everything is a function. Design patterns become patterns of function combinations. As such, there is no real counterpart to the traditional design patterns outlined by the Gang of Four for the object-oriented world. So, what does the functional paradigm...

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