a primary example for Functional programming in javascript

  1. background

In pursuit of a real-world application, let’s say we need an e-commerce web application
for a mail-order coffee bean company. They sell several types of coffee and in different
quantities, both of which affect the price.

  1. Imperative methods

First, let’s go with the procedural route. To keep this demonstration down to earth, we’ll
have to create objects that hold the data. This allows the ability to fetch the values from a
database if we need to. But for now, we’ll assume they’re statically defined:

// create some objects to store the data.
var columbian = {
    name: 'columbian',
    basePrice: 5
};
var frenchRoast = {
    name: 'french roast',
    basePrice: 8
};
var decaf = {
    name: 'decaf',
    basePrice: 6
};

// we'll use a helper function to calculate the cost
// according to the size and print it to an HTML list
function printPrice(coffee, size) {
  if (size == 'small') {
    var price = coffee.basePrice + 2;
  }
  else if (size == 'medium') {
    var price = coffee.basePrice + 4;
  }
  else {
    var price = coffee.basePrice + 6;
  }
  // create the new html list item
  var node = document.createElement("li");
  var label = coffee.name + ' ' + size;
  var textnode = document.createTextNode(label+' price: $'+price);
  node.appendChild(textnode);
  document.getElementById('products').appendChild(node);
}
// now all we need to do is call the printPrice function
// for every single combination of coffee type and size
printPrice(columbian, 'small');
printPrice(columbian, 'medium');
printPrice(columbian, 'large');
printPrice(frenchRoast, 'small');
printPrice(frenchRoast, 'medium');
printPrice(frenchRoast, 'large');
printPrice(decaf, 'small');
printPrice(decaf, 'medium');
printPrice(decaf, 'large');

 
  1. Functional programming

While imperative code tells the machine, step-by-step, what it needs to do to solve the
problem, functional programming instead seeks to describe the problem mathematically so
that the machine can do the rest.
With a more functional approach, the same application can be written as follows:

// separate the data and logic from the interface
var printPrice = function(price, label) {
    var node = document.createElement("li");
    var textnode = document.createTextNode(label+' price: $'+price);
    node.appendChild(textnode);
    document.getElementById('products 2').appendChild(node);
}
// create function objects for each type of coffee
var columbian = function(){
    this.name = 'columbian';
    this.basePrice = 5;
};
var frenchRoast = function(){
    this.name = 'french roast';
    this.basePrice = 8;
};
var decaf = function(){
    this.name = 'decaf';
    this.basePrice = 6;
};
// create object literals for the different sizes
var small = {
    getPrice: function(){return this.basePrice + 2},
    getLabel: function(){return this.name + ' small'}
};
var medium = {
    getPrice: function(){return this.basePrice + 4},
    getLabel: function(){return this.name + ' medium'}
};
var large = {
    getPrice: function(){return this.basePrice + 6},
    getLabel: function(){return this.name + ' large'}
};
// put all the coffee types and sizes into arrays
var coffeeTypes = [columbian, frenchRoast, decaf];
var coffeeSizes = [small, medium, large];
// build new objects that are combinations of the above
// and put them into a new array
var coffees = coffeeTypes.reduce(function(previous, current) {
    var newCoffee = coffeeSizes.map(function(mixin) {
        // `plusmix` function for functional mixins, see Ch.7
        var newCoffeeObj = plusMixin(current, mixin);
        return new newCoffeeObj();
    });
    return previous.concat(newCoffee);
},[]);
// we've now defined how to get the price and label for each
// coffee type and size combination, now we can just print them
coffees.forEach(function(coffee){
printPrice(coffee.getPrice(),coffee.getLabel());
});


The first thing that should be obvious is that it is much more modular. This makes adding
a new size or a new coffee type as simple as shown in the following code snippet:
var peruvian = function(){
    this.name = 'peruvian';
    this.basePrice = 11;
};
var extraLarge = {
    getPrice: function(){return this.basePrice + 10},
    getLabel: function(){return this.name + ' extra large'}
};
coffeeTypes.push(Peruvian);
coffeeSizes.push(extraLarge);

Arrays of coffee objects and size objects are “mixed” together,—that is, their methods and
member variables are combined—with a custom function called plusMixin (see Chapter
7, Functional and Object-oriented Programming in JavaScript). The coffee type classes
contain the member variables and the sizes contain methods to calculate the name and
price. The “mixing” happens within a map operation, which applies a pure function to each
element in an array and returns a new function inside a reduce() operation—another
higher-order function similar to the map function, except that all the elements in the array
are combined into one. Finally, the new array of all possible combinations of types and
sizes is iterated through with the forEach() method The forEach() method is yet another
higher-order function that applies a callback function to each object in an array. In this
example, we provide it as an anonymous function that instantiates the objects and calls the
printPrice() function with the object’s getPrice() and getLabel() methods as
arguments.
Actually, we could make this example even more functional by removing the coffees
variable and chaining the functions together—another little trick in functional
programming.

coffeeTypes.reduce(function(previous, current) {
    var newCoffee = coffeeSizes.map(function(mixin) {
            // `plusMixin` function for functional mixins, see Ch.7
            var newCoffeeObj = plusMixin(current, mixin);
            return new newCoffeeObj();
        });
        return previous.concat(newCoffee);
},[]).forEach(function(coffee) {    
    printPrice(coffee.getPrice(),coffee.getLabel());
});

Also, the control flow is not as top-to-bottom as the imperative code was. In functional
programming, the map() function and other higher-order functions take the place of for
and while loops and very little importance is placed on the order of execution. This makes
it a little trickier for newcomers to the paradigm to read the code but, once you get the
hang of it, it’s not hard at all to follow and you’ll see that it is much better.

 
原文地址:https://www.cnblogs.com/uchenm/p/4981579.html