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Functional Python Programming

Functional Python Programming

By : Steven F. Lott
4 (9)
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Functional Python Programming

Functional Python Programming

4 (9)
By: Steven F. Lott

Overview of this book

This book is for developers who want to use Python to write programs that lean heavily on functional programming design patterns. You should be comfortable with Python programming, but no knowledge of functional programming paradigms is needed.
Table of Contents (18 chapters)
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17
Index

Monad concepts, the bind() function and the Binary Right Shift operator

The name of the PyMonad library comes from the functional programming concept of a monad, a function that has a strict order. The underlying assumption behind much functional programming is that functional evaluation is liberal: it can be optimized or rearranged as necessary. A monad provides an exception that imposes a strict left-to-right ordering.

Python, as we have seen, is strict. It doesn't require monads. We can, however, still apply the concept in places where it can help clarify a complex algorithm.

The technology for imposing strict evaluation is a binding between a monad and a function that will return a monad. A flat expression will become nested bindings that can't be reordered by an optimizing compiler. The bind() function is mapped to the >> operator, allowing us to write expressions like this:

Just(some file) >> read header >> read next >> read next

The preceding expression...

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