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Hands-On Functional Programming with C++

You're reading from   Hands-On Functional Programming with C++ An effective guide to writing accelerated functional code using C++17 and C++20

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Product type Paperback
Published in Jun 2019
Publisher Packt
ISBN-13 9781789807332
Length 358 pages
Edition 1st Edition
Languages
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Author (1):
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Alexandru Bolboaca Alexandru Bolboaca
Author Profile Icon Alexandru Bolboaca
Alexandru Bolboaca
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Toc

Table of Contents (23) Chapters Close

Preface 1. Section 1: Functional Building Blocks in C++ FREE CHAPTER
2. An Introduction to Functional Programming 3. Understanding Pure Functions 4. Deep Dive into Lambdas 5. The Idea of Functional Composition 6. Partial Application and Currying 7. Section 2: Design with Functions
8. Thinking in Functions - from Data in to Data out 9. Removing Duplication with Functional Operations 10. Improving Cohesion Using Classes 11. Test-Driven Development for Functional Programming 12. Section 3: Reaping the Benefits of Functional Programming
13. Performance Optimization 14. Property-Based Testing 15. Refactoring to and through Pure Functions 16. Immutability and Architecture - Event Sourcing 17. Section 4: The Present and Future of Functional Programming in C++
18. Lazy Evaluation Using the Ranges Library 19. STL Support and Proposals 20. Standard Language Support and Proposals 21. Assessments 22. Other Books You May Enjoy

What this book covers

Chapter 1, An Introduction to Functional Programming, introduces you to the fundamental ideas of functional programming.

Chapter 2, Understanding Pure Functions, teaches you the fundamental building blocks of functional programming, functions that focus on immutability, and how to write them in C++.

Chapter 3, Deep Dive into Lambdas, focuses on lambdas and how to write them in C++.

Chapter 4, The Idea of Functional Composition, looks at how to compose functions with a higher order operation.

Chapter 5, Partial Application and Currying, teaches you how to use two fundamental operations on functions—partial application and currying in C++.

Chapter 6, Thinking in Functions – from Data in to Data out, introduces you to another way of organizing your code, enabling function-centric design.

Chapter 7, Removing Duplication with Functional Operations, is an overview of the Don't Repeat Yourself (DRY) principle, the types of code duplication and code similarities, and how to write more DRY code using functional operations such as composition, partial application, and currying.

Chapter 8, Improving Cohesion Using Classes, demonstrates how functions can evolve into classes and how classes can be turned into functions.

Chapter 9, Test-Driven Development for Functional Programming, looks at how to use Test-Driven Development (TDD) with functional programming and at how immutability and pure functions simplify tests.

Chapter 10, Performance Optimization, dives into specific methods of how to optimize the performance of function-centric design, including memoization, tail recursion optimization, and parallel execution.

Chapter 11, Property-Based Testing, looks at how functional programming enables a new paradigm of writing automated tests that enhances example-based testing with data generation.

Chapter 12, Refactoring to and through Pure Functions, explains how any existing code can be refactored to pure functions and then back into classes with minimal risk. It also looks at classic design patterns and a few functional design patterns.

Chapter 13, Immutability and Architecture – Event Sourcing, explains that immutability can move at the data storage level, looks at how to use event sourcing, and discusses its advantages and disadvantages.

Chapter 14, Lazy Evaluation Using the Ranges Library, dives into the awesome ranges library and demonstrates how to use it in C++ 17 and C++ 20.

Chapter 15, STL Support and Proposals, looks at STL functional features in the C++ 17 standard and at a few interesting additions to C++ 20.

Chapter 16, Standard Language Support and Proposals, closes the book with an overview of the fundamental building blocks of functional programming and the various options for using them in the C++ 17 standard.

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