Functional Programming in R: Advanced Statistical Programming for Data Science, Analysis and Finance
โ Scribed by Thomas Mailund (auth.)
- Publisher
- Apress
- Year
- 2017
- Tongue
- English
- Leaves
- 109
- Edition
- 1
- Category
- Library
No coin nor oath required. For personal study only.
โฆ Synopsis
Master functions and discover how to write functional programs in R. In this concise book, you'll make your functions pure by avoiding side-effects; youโll write functions that manipulate other functions, and youโll construct complex functions using simpler functions as building blocks.
In Functional Programming in R, youโll see how we can replace loops, which can have side-effects, with recursive functions that can more easily avoid them. In addition, the book covers why you shouldn't use recursion when loops are more efficient and how you can get the best of both worlds.
Functional programming is a style of programming, like object-oriented programming, but one that focuses on data transformations and calculations rather than objects and state. Where in object-oriented programming you model your programs by describing which states an object can be in and how methods will reveal or modify that state, in functional programming you model programs by describing how functions translate input data to output data. Functions themselves are considered to be data you can manipulate and much of the strength of functional programming comes from manipulating functions; that is, building more complex functions by combining simpler functions.
What You'll Learn
- Write functions in R including infix operators and replacement functions
- Create higher order functions
- Pass functions to other functions and start using functions as data you can manipulate
- Use Filer, Map and Reduce functions to express the intent behind code clearly and safely
- Build new functions from existing functions without necessarily writing any new functions, using point-free programming
- Create functions that carry data along with them
Who This Book Is For
Those with at least some experience with programming in R.
โฆ Table of Contents
Front Matter....Pages i-xv
Functions in R....Pages 1-23
Pure Functional Programming....Pages 25-41
Scope and Closures....Pages 43-61
Higher-Order Functions....Pages 63-76
Filter, Map, and Reduce....Pages 77-93
Point-Free Programming....Pages 95-99
Back Matter....Pages 101-104
โฆ Subjects
Programming Languages, Compilers, Interpreters;Programming Techniques;Software Engineering
๐ SIMILAR VOLUMES
<span>Master functions and discover how to write functional programs in R. In this book, updated for R 4, you'll learn to make your functions pure by avoiding side effects, write functions that manipulate other functions, and construct complex functions using simpler functions as building blocks.<br
<span>Master functions and discover how to write functional programs in R. In this book, updated for R 4, you'll learn to make your functions pure by avoiding side effects, write functions that manipulate other functions, and construct complex functions using simpler functions as building blocks.<br
Master functions and discover how to write functional programs in R. In this book, updated for R 4, you'll learn to make your functions pure by avoiding side effects, write functions that manipulate other functions, and construct complex functions using simpler functions as building blocks. In Fu
<p>Learn how to write object-oriented programs in R and how to construct classes and class hierarchies in the three object-oriented systems available in R. This book gives an introduction to object-oriented programming in the R programming language and shows you how to use and apply R in an object-o
<p>Learn how to manipulate functions and expressions to modify how the R language interprets itself. This book is an introduction to metaprogramming in the R language, so you will write programs to manipulate other programs. <i>Metaprogramming in R</i> shows you how to treat code as data that you ca