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Jabz

Powerful and practical abstractions for JavaScript. Functors, monads, foldables, traversables, and all that jazz.

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Goals and features

For a more detailed introduction to the design of the specification and a comparison to Fantasy Land please see this blog post.

Install

npm install @funkia/jabz

Documentation

See the API documentation and the example below.

Note that the specification for the abstractions is not written down formally yet. But the source code contain TypeScript interfaces that documents the different required methods. The laws associated with the abstractions are as expected if one is familiar with them.

Example

This example demonstrates some of what Jabz can do by implementing a simple singly linked list aka. a cons list.

@monad @traversable
class Cons {
  constructor(v, t) {
    this.val = v;
    this.tail = t;
  }
  concat(c) {
    return this === nil ? c : cons(this.val, this.tail.concat(c));
  }
  of(b: B) {
    return cons(b, nil);
  }
  chain<B>(f) {
    return this === nil ? nil : f(this.val).concat(this.tail.chain(f));
  }
  traverse<B>(a, f) {
    return this === nil ? a.of(nil) : lift(cons, f(this.val), this.tail.traverse(a, f));
  }
}
const nil = new Cons(undefined, undefined);
function cons(a: A, as) {
  return new Cons(a, as);
}
function fromArray(as) {
  return as.length === 0 ? nil : cons(as[0], fromArray(as.slice(1)));
}

Since Cons contains the methods of and chain it can implement monad. This is done with the @monad decorator. JavaScript decorators are just plain old functions so they can also be used without the decorator syntax

monad(Cons);

The function allows implementations flexibility in what methods they choose to provide. For instance monad can also be implemented by defining a of, a map and a chain method.

Similar to Monad, Traversable is implemented by defining the traverse method and using the traversable decorator.

When we implement Monad Jabz automatically derives implementations for Functor and Applicative. Likewise when we implement Traversable it derives Foldable. Thus, Jabz can give us a lot of things for free just from the few methods the Cons class defines.

Map functions over elements in the list.

mapTo((n) => n * n, fromArray([1, 2, 3, 4])); //=> [1, 4, 9, 16]

Change each element in the list to a constant.

mapTo(8, fromArray([1, 2, 3, 4])); //=> [8, 8, 8, 8]

Apply a list of functions to a list of values.

ap(fromArray([(n) => n * 2, (n) => n * n]), fromArray(1, 2, 3)); //=> [2, 4, 6, 1, 4, 9]

Folding.

foldr((n, m) => n + m, 3, fromArray([1, 2, 3, 4, 5])); //=> 18

Find an element satisfying a predicate.

find((n) => n > 6, fromArray([1, 8, 3, 7, 5])); //=> just(8)
findLast((n) => n > 6, fromArray([1, 8, 3, 7, 5])); //=> just(7)

We can convert a cons-list to an array

toArray(fromArray([1, 2, 3, 4])); //=> [1, 2, 3, 4]

We can flatten nested cons-lists.

flatten(fromArray([fromArray([1, 2]), fromArray([3, 4, 5])])); //=> [1, 2, 3, 4, 5]

Seamless instances

Seamless instances means that certain native JavaScript types can be used as if they implemented the abstractions relevant for them.