Purifree is a fork from Purify that allows you to program in a point-free style, and adds a few new capabilities.
Purify is a library for functional programming in TypeScript. Its purpose is to allow developers to use popular patterns and abstractions that are available in most functional languages. Learn more about Purify here
Purifree is available as a package on npm. You can install it with a package manager of your choice:
$ npm install purifree-ts
Purifree is 100% compatible with purify, and can be used interchangeably.
Point-free functions can be used with any ADTs (without needing module-specific imports), and can also be used together with the chainable (purify) API.
// pointfree: Maybe<string>
const pointfree = pipe(
Just('name'),
map((name) => name.toUpperCase()),
filter((name) => name.length > 5),
chain((name) => (Math.random() > 0.5 ? Just(name + ' lucky :)') : Nothing))
)
// matchTest: string
const matchTest = pipe(
Right<number, string>(100),
chain((num) => (num > 50 ? Right(num) : Left(`bad number: ${num}`))),
match({
Right: (e) => 'Great number!' + e,
Left: (e) => `OK number. | msg: (${e})`
})
)
This fork features the generator do* notation for all data structures except for arrays. The do notation lets you easily chain operations without having to nest your code.
// result: Either<Error, { name: string, surname: string, favoriteColor: string }>
const result = Do(function* () {
// name: string
const name = yield* Right("name")
// surname: string
const surname = yield* Right("surname")
// favoriteColor: string
const favoriteColor = yield* Left<Error, string>(Error("DB error!"))
return {
name,
surname,
favoriteColor
}
})
Chain version equivalent:
// result: Either<Error, { name: string, surname: string, favoriteColor: string }>
const result = Right<string, Error>('name').chain((name) =>
Right<string, Error>('surname').chain((surname) =>
Left<Error, string>(Error('DB error!')).map((favoriteColor) => ({
name,
surname,
favoriteColor
}))
)
)
// Gets an Either<never, number>, maps it to an Either<never, NonEmptyList<number>>, and inverts it into a NonEmptyList<Either<never, number>>
// traverseTest: NonEmptyList<Either<never, number>>
const traverseTest = pipe(
Right(1),
traverse(NonEmptyList, (num) => NonEmptyList(num))
)
// Gets an Either<never, NonEmptyList<number>> and inverts it into a NonEmptyList<Either<never, number>>
// sequenceTest: NonEmptyList<Either<never, number>>
const sequenceTest = pipe(
Right(NonEmptyList(1)),
sequence(NonEmptyList)
)
// sequenceTTest: Either<never, [number, string, boolean]>
const sequenceTTest = sequenceT(Either.of)(Right(2), Right('name'), Right(true))
// sequenceStrutureTest: Either<string, { name: string, age: number }>
const sequenceStrutureTest = sequenceS(Either.of)({
name: Right<string, string>('name'),
age: Right<number, string>(100)
})
The function pipeK can be used as an easy way to combine functions that return monads without using chain. If you need to use a long list of chains, you can use the pipeK function to compose the functions instead of passing each one into chain. Instead of:
const getNameTest = pipe(
chain((name?: string) => name ? Just(name) : Nothing),
chain((name) => Just(name.toUpperCase())),
chain((uppercasedName) => uppercasedName.length > 3 ? Just(uppercasedName) : Nothing)
)
Use:
// getNameTest: ( name?: string ) => Maybe<string>
const getNameTest = kleisli(
(name?: string) => name ? Just(name) : Nothing,
(name) => Just(name.toUpperCase()),
(uppercasedName) => uppercasedName.length > 3 ? Just(uppercasedName) : Nothing
)
// result: Maybe<string>
const result = getNameTest('name')
You can use the liftN family of functions to lift a function that takes normal values into a function that takes and returns elevated values. WARNING: If you try lifting a function that uses generics, it will probably loose its type due to typescript.
// add takes normal values
const add = (num1: number, num2: number) => num1 + num2
// addL takes elevated values, and returns an elevated value
// addL: Lifted<(a: Ap<number>, b: Ap<number>) => Ap<number>>
const addL = lift2(add)
// add5Option (b: Either<never, number>) => Either<never, number>
const add5Option = addL(Right(5))
// result: Either<never, number> = Right(15)
const result = add5Option(Right(10))
You can try it out in the browser.