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Mastering JavaScript Functional Programming

You're reading from   Mastering JavaScript Functional Programming In-depth guide for writing robust and maintainable JavaScript code in ES8 and beyond

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Product type Paperback
Published in Nov 2017
Publisher Packt
ISBN-13 9781787287440
Length 386 pages
Edition 1st 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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Toc

Table of Contents (15) Chapters Close

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

Altering functions


In the previous section, we considered some ways of wrapping functions, so they would maintain their original functionality, though enhanced in some ways. Now we'll turn to actually modifying what the functions do, so the new results will actually differ from the original function's ones.

Doing things once, revisited

Back in Chapter 2, Thinking Functionally - A First Example, we went through an example of developing an FP-style solution for a simple problem: fixing things so a given function would work only once:

const once = func => {
    let done = false;
    return (...args) => {
        if (!done) {
            done = true;
            func(...args);
        }
    };
};

This is a perfectly fine solution, and we have nothing to object to. We can, however, think of a variation. We could observe that the given function gets called once, but its return value gets lost. That's easy to fix, however; all we require is adding a return statement. However, that wouldn't be...

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