Book Image

Functional Programming in Go

By : Dylan Meeus
Book Image

Functional Programming in Go

By: Dylan Meeus

Overview of this book

While Go is a multi-paradigm language that gives you the option to choose whichever paradigm works best for the particular problem you aim to solve, it supports features that enable you to apply functional principles in your code. In this book, you’ll learn about concepts central to the functional programming paradigm and how and when to apply functional programming techniques in Go. Starting with the basic concepts of functional programming, this Golang book will help you develop a deeper understanding of first-class functions. In the subsequent chapters, you’ll gain a more comprehensive view of the techniques and methods used in functional languages, such as function currying, partial application, and higher-order functions. You’ll then be able to apply functional design patterns for solving common programming challenges and explore how to apply concurrency mechanisms to functional programming. By the end of this book, you’ll be ready to improve your code bases by applying functional programming techniques in Go to write cleaner, safer, and bug-free code.
Table of Contents (17 chapters)
1
Part 1: Functional Programming Paradigm Essentials
7
Part 2: Using Functional Programming Techniques
11
Part 3: Design Patterns and Functional Programming Libraries

Summary

In this chapter, we looked at libraries that implement concepts of the functional programming paradigm. We started by looking at Pie, a library that can help users in building code in the functional paradigm whether working with a code base that uses Go before or after the introduction of generics in Go 1.18. Specifically for the pre-generics version, we looked at the approach of code generation for custom types to get generics-like behavior. Pie allowed us to showcase the ease with which we can create functions such as Map and Filter since the introduction of generics.

Then, looked at the Lodash-inspired Go library, lo. This library supports common functions that operate on container data types such as slices and maps, but unlike Pie, it follows a nested approach to function chaining rather than the dot notation syntax. lo does offer concurrent implementations for certain functions, so if performance is a concern and concurrency seems like the right solution, checking out...