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328 lines
11 KiB
Markdown
---
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layout: developer-doc
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title: Defining Functions
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category: syntax
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tags: [syntax, functions]
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order: 10
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---
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# Defining Functions
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Enso is a purely-functional programming language. As a result it has support for
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[first-class and higher-order functions](https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Functional_programming#First-class_and_higher-order_functions),
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meaning that you can pass functions as arguments to other functions, return
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functions from functions, assign them to variables, store them in data
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structures and so on.
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Functions in Enso are curried by default, meaning that all functions are
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actually functions in one argument, but may return functions accepting further
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arguments.
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<!-- MarkdownTOC levels="2,3" autolink="true" -->
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- [Lambdas](#lambdas)
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- [Defining Functions](#defining-functions)
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- [Methods](#methods)
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- [Calling Functions and Methods](#calling-functions-and-methods)
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- [Code Blocks](#code-blocks)
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- [Operators](#operators)
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- [Precedence](#precedence)
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- [Sections](#sections)
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- [Mixfix Functions](#mixfix-functions)
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<!-- /MarkdownTOC -->
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## Lambdas
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The most primitive non-atom construct in Enso is the lambda. This is an
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anonymous function in one argument. A lambda is defined using the `->` operator,
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where the left hand side is an argument, and the right hand side is the body of
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the function (containing arbitrary code).
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Some functional languages such as Haskell allow for the definition of a lambda
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with multiple arguments, but in Enso the type signature use of `->`and the
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lambda use of `->` are one and the same. We do not want to have to put the
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components of a type signature in parentheses, so we only allow one argument
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before each arrow.
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- Lambdas can close over variables in their surrounding scope.
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- If you want to define a multi-argument lambda, you can do it by having a
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lambda return another lambda (e.g. `a -> b -> a + b`).
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Additionally, lambdas in Enso have the following properties:
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- The lambda introduces a new scope shared by the left and right operands.
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- The left operand introduces a pattern context.
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- If a lambda occurs in a pattern context, its left-hand-side identifiers are
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introduced into the scope targeted by the outer pattern context. For example,
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the following is valid `(a -> b) -> a.default + b`.
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- Lambdas cannot currently occur in a matching context.
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Please note that if a later lambda in a chain shadows an earlier lambda (e.g.
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`a -> a -> a`), the shadowed arguments by that name are inaccessible. If you
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want to unify later arguments with previous ones, you must employ the scope
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reference rule and write (in this case) `a -> A -> a`.
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> The actionables for this section are:
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>
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> - In the future we want to be able to match on function types, so this
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> restriction should be relaxed.
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> - Do we want any automated unification to take place in the shadowing case?
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## Defining Functions
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A function definition is just syntactic sugar for the definition of a lambda,
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and hence has all the properties that a lambda does. Syntactically, functions
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are defined in a similar way to variables. The only difference is that the
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function name is followed by one or more parameters.
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```ruby
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sum x y = x + y
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```
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Under the hood, functions are desugared to a lambda assigned to a variable that
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binds the function name. This means that:
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- Like any variable, you can use the `:` type ascription operator to provide a
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user-defined type for the function.
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```ruby
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sum : (a: Monoid) -> a -> a
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sum : x -> y -> x + y
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sum x y = x + y
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```
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- Functions have an _arity_. Unlike a single lambda which always has an arity of
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one, function arity refers to the number of arguments in the function
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definition, which may not always be deduced from the type signature, but may
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still be inferred.
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## Methods
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Enso makes a distinction between functions and methods. In Enso, a method is a
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function where the first argument (known as the `this` argument) is associated
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with a given atom. Methods are dispatched dynamically based on the type of the
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`this` argument, while functions are not.
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Methods can be defined in Enso in two ways:
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1. **In the Body of a Type:** A function defined in the body of a `type`
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definition is automatically converted to a method on all the atoms defined in
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the body of that type definition.
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```ruby
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type Maybe a
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Nothing
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type Just (value : a)
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isJust = case this of
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Nothing -> False
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Just _ -> True
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```
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2. **As an Extension Method:** A function defined _explicitly_ on an atom counts
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as an extension method on that atom. It can be defined on a typeset to apply
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to all the atoms within that typeset.
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```ruby
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Number.floor = case this of
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Integer -> ...
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...
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```
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3. **As a Function with an Explicit `this` Argument:** A function defined with
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the type of the `this` argument specified to be a type.
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```ruby
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floor (this : Number) = case this of
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Integer -> ...
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```
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If the user does not explicitly specify the `this` argument by name when
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defining a method (e.g. they use the `Type.name` syntax), it is implicitly added
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to the start of the argument list.
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## Calling Functions and Methods
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Enso makes the distinction between functions and methods. Methods are entities
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that are dispatched _dynamically_ and looked up at runtime, while functions are
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defined locally and are looked up at compile time. In order to provide good
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diagnostics, we distinguish between how functions and methods are called.
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- To call a function `f` on arguments `a` and `b`, we write `f a b`.
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- To call a method `f` defined on a type `A` (value `a`, here) on argument `b`,
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we write `a.f b`.
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## Code Blocks
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Top-level blocks in the language are evaluated immediately. This means that the
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layout of the code has no impact on semantics of the code:
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- This means that the following `a` and `b` are equivalent.
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```ruby
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a = foo x y
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b =
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foo x y
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```
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- To suspend blocks, we provide a `suspend` function in the standard library.
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- This function takes any expression as an argument (including a block), and
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suspends the execution of that expression such that it is not evaluated until
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forced later.
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```ruby
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susp = suspend
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x = foo x y z
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x.do_thing
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```
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Alternatively, it is sufficient to type the binding for the block as
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`Suspended a` where `a` is the type of the block.
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```ruby
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susp : Suspended a =
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x = foo x y z
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x.do_thing
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```
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It should be noted that this does not yet work.
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The following rules apply to code blocks:
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- Code blocks are desugared into in-order applications of monadic bind (as in
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keeping with the fact that all blocks are monadic contexts).
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- If an expression that returns a value is not assigned to an identifier, this
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will issue a warning.
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- To suppress this warning you can assign it to a blank (`_`).
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```ruby
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test =
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_ = expr1
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expr2
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# Becomes
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test =
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expr1 >>= (_ -> expr2)
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# Equivalent to
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test =
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expr1 >> expr2
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```
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- If the trailing line of the block (the return value) is an assignment, it will
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return `Nothing` as all assignments do.
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```ruby
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foo =
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pat1 = expr1
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# Becomes
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foo =
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expr1 >>= (pat1 -> Nothing)
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```
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## Operators
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In Enso, an operator is a function with a non-alphanumeric name (e.g. `+`). We
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only support binary operators, with left and right arguments.
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Enso provides a significant amount of flexibility for developers who want to
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define custom operators. Formally, any sequence of the following characters
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forms an operators `.!$%&*+-/<>?^~\`. Operator definitions have three main
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parts:
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- **Definition:** This defines a function that is called on the arguments
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provided to the operator.
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- **Precedence:** This is an optional block that defines the
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[precedence relation](https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Order_of_operations) for
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the operator. Precedence in Enso is specified _in relation_ to existing
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operators. If you do not provide this information, no precedence relations
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will be defined.
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- **Associativity:** This is an optional block that defines the
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[operator associativity](https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Operator_associativity)
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to be either `left`, `right`, or `none`. If you do not provide this, the
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operator's associativity will default to `left`.
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```ruby
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@prec [> *, < $]
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@assoc left
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^ a n = a * a ^ (n-1)
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```
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### Precedence
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Operator precedence in Enso is a collection of rules that reflect conventions
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about which operations to perform first in order to evaluate a given expression
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that contains operators. However, operator precedence in Enso differs from many
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other programming languages.
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- Precedence is not set at fixed levels, but is instead defined in relation to
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the precedence of other operators.
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- Precedence of an operator in Enso depends on whether a particular operator is
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surrounded by spaces or not. This means that the precedence of _any_ operator
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not surrounded by spaces is always higher than the precedence of any operator
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surrounded by spaces. The only exception to this rule is the `,` operator,
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which retains the same precedence level regardless of whether it is surrounded
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by spaces or not.
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This space-based precedence may seem strange coming from other languages, but it
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allows for writing _far_ cleaner code than other functional languages. This is
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best demonstrated by example. Consider the following code:
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```ruby
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list = 1 .. 100
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randomList = list . each random
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headOfList = randomList . take 10
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result = headOfList . sort
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```
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This could easily be refactored to the following one-liner:
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```ruby
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result = (((1 .. 100).each random).take 10).sort
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```
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This is still quite noisy, however, so using the whitespace-sensitive operator
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precedence rules, combined with the fact that the operator `.` is a regular
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operator, we get the following.
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```ruby
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result = 1..100 . each random . take 10 . sort
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```
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### Sections
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An operator section is a nice shorthand for partially applying an operator. It
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works as follows.
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- Where an argument is not applied to an operator, the missing argument is
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replaced by an implicit `_`.
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- The application is then translated based upon the rules for
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[underscore arguments](./function-arguments.md#underscore-arguments) described
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later.
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- The whitespace-based precedence rules discussed above also apply to operator
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sections.
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## Mixfix Functions
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A mixfix function is a function that is made up of multiple sections. They are
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defined using a special syntax, and operate as follows:
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- They are defined using a 'split snake case'. The first section is written as
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normal, but subsequent sections are prefixed by an underscore (`if c _then a`,
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for example).
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- The layout rules applied to mixfix functions operate as if each section was a
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separate operator, allowing you to write an indented block of code after each
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section.
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Probably the best-known example of a mixfix function is `if-then-else`, which is
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indeed defined in the Enso standard library.
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```ruby
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if foo == bar then frob else
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thing1
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thing2
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```
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