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by de_keyboard
1240 days ago
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The F# syntax is an incredibly simple bit of syntactic sugar. Just replace this: x |> f
With this: f(x)
For the join example, you must do this: xs
|> (x => x.join(' '))
It de-sugars to: (x => x.join(' '))(xs)
... which of course is simply: xs.join(' ')
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Does join(a)(b) mean join(a, b) or join(b, a)? Does it mean a.join(b) or b.join(a)? And is a or b the delimiter? I don't really feel confident without looking it up or trying it out. I have a similar problem with Haskell's function syntax a -> a -> a.
If the function was called makeJoinerBy(sep)(array), it would be somewhat clearer: