From: "shyouhei (Shyouhei Urabe)" Date: 2012-06-15T16:18:20+09:00 Subject: [ruby-core:45662] [ruby-trunk - Feature #6594] Integrated Functor Issue #6594 has been updated by shyouhei (Shyouhei Urabe). trans (Thomas Sawyer) wrote: > @shyouhei Fixed? How is there a "ruby's bug"? @trans You wrote "creation of an intermediate object ... is very inefficient". That thing should be lightweight, or should completely be skipped, without introducing such new syntax. ---------------------------------------- Feature #6594: Integrated Functor https://bugs.ruby-lang.org/issues/6594#change-27261 Author: trans (Thomas Sawyer) Status: Open Priority: Normal Assignee: Category: core Target version: 2.0.0 =begin I know the developers meeting is coming up so I'd like to get a few ideas I've had sitting in the wings out in the air before then. One the more useful is the idea of integrating Functors directly into the language. "Functor" is the term I use for "higher-order function". I blogged about this idea and you can read it here: http://trans.github.com/2011-09-07-ruby-heart-higher-order-functions/ The super short version is this: def f => op, arg arg.send(__op__, arg) end f + 3 #=> 6 f * 3 #=> 9 Another example: class String def file => op, *args File.send(__op__, self, *args) end end "README.rdoc".file.mtime #=> 2012-06-14 12:34:45 -0400 I'm using `=>` as means of indicating a higher-order function. Of course another syntax could be used if this won't fly. The important thing is the idea of higher-order functions being integrated directly into the language. Doing this without that integration requires the creation of an intermediate object for each call which is very inefficient. =end -- http://bugs.ruby-lang.org/