Difference between revisions of "Functional programming"
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Functional programming has its roots in [[lambda calculus]], a [[formal system]] developed in the 1930s to investigate: | Functional programming has its roots in [[lambda calculus]], a [[formal system]] developed in the 1930s to investigate: | ||
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* The [[Entscheidungsproblem]] | * The [[Entscheidungsproblem]] | ||
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Revision as of 17:40, 13 March 2016
In computer science, functional programming is a programming paradigm that treats computation as the evaluation of mathematical functions and avoids changing-state and mutable data.
Contents
Description
It uses a declarative programming paradigm: programming is done with expressions.
Depends only on the arguments
In functional code, the output value of a function depends only on the arguments that are input to the function
Therefore calling a function f twice with the same value for an argument x will produce the same result f(x) each time.
Eliminating side effects
Eliminating side effects, i.e. changes in state that do not depend on the function inputs, can make it much easier to understand and predict the behavior of a program, which is one of the key motivations for the development of functional programming.
History
Functional programming has its roots in lambda calculus, a formal system developed in the 1930s to investigate:
Many functional programming languages can be viewed as elaborations on the lambda calculus.
Logic programming
Another well-known declarative programming paradigm, logic programming, is based on relations.
Imperative programming
In contrast, imperative programming changes state with commands in the source language, the most simple example being assignment.
See also
- Computer program
- Computer programming
- Computer science
- Declarative programming
- Entscheidungsproblem
- Expression (computer science)
- Formal system
- Function (mathematics)
- Lambda calculus
- Logic programming
- Programming paradigm
- Recursion
External links
- Functional programming @ Wikipedia