Book Image

Getting Started with Julia

By : Ivo Balbaert
Book Image

Getting Started with Julia

By: Ivo Balbaert

Overview of this book

Table of Contents (19 chapters)
Getting Started with Julia
Credits
About the Author
About the Reviewers
www.PacktPub.com
Preface
The Rationale for Julia
Index

Anonymous functions


The function f(x, y) at the end of the Defining functions section can also be written with no name, as an anonymous function: (x, y) -> x^3 – y + x * y. We can, however, bind it to a name such as f = (x, y) -> x^3 – y + x * y, and then call it, for example, as f(3, 2). Anonymous functions are also often written using the following syntax:

function (x)
    x + 2
end
(anonymous function)
julia> ans(3)
5

Often, they are also written with a lambda expression as (x) -> x + 2. Before the stab character "->" are the arguments, and after the stab character we have the return value. This can be shortened to x -> x + 2. A function without arguments would be written as () -> println("hello, Julia").

Here is an anonymous function taking three arguments: (x, y, z) -> 3x + 2y - z. When the performance is important, try to use named functions instead, because calling anonymous functions involves a huge overhead. Anonymous functions are mostly used when passing...