Book Image

Hands-On Functional Programming with C++

By : Alexandru Bolboaca
Book Image

Hands-On Functional Programming with C++

By: Alexandru Bolboaca

Overview of this book

Functional programming enables you to divide your software into smaller, reusable components that are easy to write, debug, and maintain. Combined with the power of C++, you can develop scalable and functional applications for modern software requirements. This book will help you discover the functional features in C++ 17 and C++ 20 to build enterprise-level applications. Starting with the fundamental building blocks of functional programming and how to use them in C++, you’ll explore functions, currying, and lambdas. As you advance, you’ll learn how to improve cohesion and delve into test-driven development, which will enable you in designing better software. In addition to this, the book covers architectural patterns such as event sourcing to help you get to grips with the importance of immutability for data storage. You’ll even understand how to “think in functions” and implement design patterns in a functional way. By the end of this book, you’ll be able to write faster and cleaner production code in C++ with the help of functional programming.
Table of Contents (23 chapters)
Free Chapter
1
Section 1: Functional Building Blocks in C++
7
Section 2: Design with Functions
12
Section 3: Reaping the Benefits of Functional Programming
17
Section 4: The Present and Future of Functional Programming in C++

Summary

Eric Niebler's ranges library is a rare feat in software engineering. It manages to simplify the use of existing STL high-order functions, while adding lazy evaluation, with a topping of data generation. Not only is it part of the C++ 20 standard, but it is also useful for older versions of C++.

Even if you don't use a functional style of structuring your code, and whether you prefer mutable or immutable code, the ranges library allows you to make it elegant and composable. Therefore, I advise you to play with it and try for yourself how it changes your code. It's definitely worth it, and it's an enjoyable exercise.

We're closing in on the end of this book. It's now time to have a look at STL and the language standard support functional programming, and what we can expect from C++ 20, and this will be the topic of the next chapter.

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