Some functional languages work by transforming a multiargument function syntax into a collection of single argument functions. This process is called currying: it's named after logician Haskell Curry, who developed the theory from earlier concepts.
Currying is a technique for transforming a multiargument function into higher-order single argument functions. In a simple case, consider a function ; given two arguments x and y; this will return some resulting value, z. We can curry into into two functions: and . Given the first argument value, x, evaluating the function returns a new one-argument function, . This second function can be given the second argument value, y, and it returns the desired result, z.
We can evaluate a curried function in Python as follows: f_c(2)(3). We apply the curried function to the first argument...