Functional Programming: Difference between revisions
Line 19: | Line 19: | ||
==Pure Function== | ==Pure Function== | ||
Also known as ''side-effect-free function'' or ''stateless function''. | A piece of behavior that is perfectly descried solely by the way it transform arguments to results, behaving as a mathematical function and having no side effects. Also known as ''side-effect-free function'' or ''stateless function''. | ||
Also see [[Parallelism#Pure_Function|Parallelism]]. | Also see [[Parallelism#Pure_Function|Parallelism]]. |
Revision as of 18:53, 22 March 2018
Internal
Overview
The ability to pass functions as arguments and no shared mutable data are the cornerstones of functional programming. Functional programming is essentially different than imperative programming, where a program is described in terms of a sequence of statements that mutate state.
Closures and recursion are at the base of the functional programming paradigm.
Java 8 introduced lambda expressions, which allow behavior parameterization and functional programming.
Behavior Parameterization
Prior to Java 8, behavior parameterization was possible with anonymous classes. In Java 8, functions can be explicitly passed to the API, as parameters, and returned as results.
Function
Pure Function
A piece of behavior that is perfectly descried solely by the way it transform arguments to results, behaving as a mathematical function and having no side effects. Also known as side-effect-free function or stateless function.
Also see Parallelism.