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Soar with Haskell

You're reading from  Soar with Haskell

Product type Book
Published in Dec 2023
Publisher Packt
ISBN-13 9781805128458
Pages 418 pages
Edition 1st Edition
Languages
Author (1):
Tom Schrijvers Tom Schrijvers
Profile icon Tom Schrijvers

Table of Contents (23) Chapters

Preface 1. Part 1:Basic Functional Programming
2. Chapter 1: Functions 3. Chapter 2: Algebraic Datatypes 4. Chapter 3: Recursion 5. Chapter 4: Higher-Order Functions 6. Part 2: Haskell-Specific Features
7. Chapter 5: First-Class Functions 8. Chapter 6: Type Classes 9. Chapter 7: Lazy Evaluation 10. Chapter 8: Input/Output 11. Part 3: Functional Design Patterns
12. Chapter 9: Monoids and Foldables 13. Chapter 10: Functors, Applicative Functors, and Traversables 14. Chapter 11: Monads 15. Chapter 12: Monad Transformers 16. Part 4: Practical Programming
17. Chapter 13: Domain-Specific Languages 18. Chapter 14: Parser Combinators 19. Chapter 15: Lenses 20. Chapter 16: Property-Based Testing 21. Index 22. Other Books You May Enjoy

Eta reduction

The third feature that Haskell has borrowed from the lambda calculus is eta reduction. Eta reduction is named after the Greek letter eta, written as η. It allows us to shorten function definitions of a particular form. Its inverse is known as eta expansion, and collectively, they are known as eta conversion.

Basic eta reduction

We will illustrate the idea using a basic anonymous function:

\x -> sin x

This function takes a parameter, x, and computes its sine by calling the sin function on it. The observation that eta reduction makes is that this anonymous function behaves in exactly the same way as the sin function itself; both functions produce the same output given the same input. In other words, this anonymous function is indistinguishable from sin and, therefore, equal to it. For example, consider the following:

map (\x -> sin x) [1.0, 2.0, 3.0]

We can rewrite that as the following:

map sin [1.0, 2.0, 3.0]

This idea also works at the...

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