{{meta {load_files: ["code/scripts.js", "code/chapter/05_higher_order.js", "code/intro.js"], zip: "node/html"}}}
{{if interactive
{{quote {author: "Master Yuan-Ma", title: "The Book of Programming", chapter: true}
Tzu-li and Tzu-ssu were boasting about the size of their latest programs. 'Two-hundred thousand lines,' said Tzu-li, 'not counting comments!' Tzu-ssu responded, 'Pssh, mine is almost a million lines already.' Master Yuan-Ma said, 'My best program has five hundred lines.' Hearing this, Tzu-li and Tzu-ssu were enlightened.
quote}}
if}}
{{quote {author: "C.A.R. Hoare", title: "1980 ACM Turing Award Lecture", chapter: true}
{{index "Hoare, C.A.R."}}
There are two ways of constructing a software design: One way is to make it so simple that there are obviously no deficiencies, and the other way is to make it so complicated that there are no obvious deficiencies.
quote}}
{{figure {url: "img/chapter_picture_5.jpg", alt: "Letters from different scripts", chapter: true}}}
{{index "program size"}}
A large program is a costly program, and not just because of the time it takes to build. Size almost always involves ((complexity)), and complexity confuses programmers. Confused programmers, in turn, introduce mistakes (((bug))s) into programs. A large program then provides a lot of space for these bugs to hide, making them hard to find.
{{index "summing example"}}
Let's briefly go back to the final two example programs in the introduction. The first is self-contained and six lines long.
let total = 0, count = 1;
while (count <= 10) {
total += count;
count += 1;
}
console.log(total);
The second relies on two external functions and is one line long.
console.log(sum(range(1, 10)));
Which one is more likely to contain a bug?
{{index "program size"}}
If we count the size of the definitions of sum
and range
, the
second program is also big—even bigger than the first. But still, I'd
argue that it is more likely to be correct.
{{index [abstraction, "with higher-order functions"], "domain-specific language"}}
It is more likely to be correct because the solution is expressed in a ((vocabulary)) that corresponds to the problem being solved. Summing a range of numbers isn't about loops and counters. It is about ranges and sums.
The definitions of this vocabulary (the functions sum
and range
)
will still involve loops, counters, and other incidental details. But
because they are expressing simpler concepts than the program as a
whole, they are easier to get right.
In the context of programming, these kinds of vocabularies are usually called ((abstraction))s. Abstractions hide details and give us the ability to talk about problems at a higher (or more abstract) level.
{{index "recipe analogy", "pea soup"}}
As an analogy, compare these two recipes for pea soup. The first one goes like this:
{{quote
Put 1 cup of dried peas per person into a container. Add water until the peas are well covered. Leave the peas in water for at least 12 hours. Take the peas out of the water and put them in a cooking pan. Add 4 cups of water per person. Cover the pan and keep the peas simmering for two hours. Take half an onion per person. Cut it into pieces with a knife. Add it to the peas. Take a stalk of celery per person. Cut it into pieces with a knife. Add it to the peas. Take a carrot per person. Cut it into pieces. With a knife! Add it to the peas. Cook for 10 more minutes.
quote}}
And this is the second recipe:
{{quote
Per person: 1 cup dried split peas, half a chopped onion, a stalk of celery, and a carrot.
Soak peas for 12 hours. Simmer for 2 hours in 4 cups of water (per person). Chop and add vegetables. Cook for 10 more minutes.
quote}}
{{index vocabulary}}
The second is shorter and easier to interpret. But you do need to understand a few more cooking-related words such as soak, simmer, chop, and, I guess, vegetable.
When programming, we can't rely on all the words we need to be waiting for us in the dictionary. Thus, we might fall into the pattern of the first recipe—work out the precise steps the computer has to perform, one by one, blind to the higher-level concepts that they express.
{{index abstraction}}
It is a useful skill, in programming, to notice when you are working at too low a level of abstraction.
{{index [array, iteration]}}
Plain functions, as we've seen them so far, are a good way to build abstractions. But sometimes they fall short.
{{index "for loop"}}
It is common for a program to do something a given number of times.
You can write a for
((loop)) for that, like this:
for (let i = 0; i < 10; i++) {
console.log(i);
}
Can we abstract "doing something N times" as a function? Well, it's
easy to write a function that calls console.log
N times.
function repeatLog(n) {
for (let i = 0; i < n; i++) {
console.log(i);
}
}
{{index [function, "higher-order"], loop, [function, "as value"]}}
{{indexsee "higher-order function", "function, higher-order"}}
But what if we want to do something other than logging the numbers? Since "doing something" can be represented as a function and functions are just values, we can pass our action as a function value.
function repeat(n, action) {
for (let i = 0; i < n; i++) {
action(i);
}
}
repeat(3, console.log);
// → 0
// → 1
// → 2
We don't have to pass a predefined function to repeat
. Often, it
is easier to create a function value on the spot instead.
let labels = [];
repeat(5, i => {
labels.push(`Unit ${i + 1}`);
});
console.log(labels);
// → ["Unit 1", "Unit 2", "Unit 3", "Unit 4", "Unit 5"]
{{index "loop body", [braces, body], [parentheses, arguments]}}
This is structured a little like a for
loop—it first describes the
kind of loop and then provides a body. However, the body is now written
as a function value, which is wrapped in the parentheses of the
call to repeat
. This is why it has to be closed with the closing
brace and closing parenthesis. In cases like this example, where the
body is a single small expression, you could also omit the
braces and write the loop on a single line.
{{index [function, "higher-order"], [function, "as value"]}}
Functions that operate on other functions, either by taking them as arguments or by returning them, are called higher-order functions. Since we have already seen that functions are regular values, there is nothing particularly remarkable about the fact that such functions exist. The term comes from ((mathematics)), where the distinction between functions and other values is taken more seriously.
{{index abstraction}}
Higher-order functions allow us to abstract over actions, not just values. They come in several forms. For example, we can have functions that create new functions.
function greaterThan(n) {
return m => m > n;
}
let greaterThan10 = greaterThan(10);
console.log(greaterThan10(11));
// → true
And we can have functions that change other functions.
function noisy(f) {
return (...args) => {
console.log("calling with", args);
let result = f(...args);
console.log("called with", args, ", returned", result);
return result;
};
}
noisy(Math.min)(3, 2, 1);
// → calling with [3, 2, 1]
// → called with [3, 2, 1] , returned 1
We can even write functions that provide new types of ((control flow)).
function unless(test, then) {
if (!test) then();
}
repeat(3, n => {
unless(n % 2 == 1, () => {
console.log(n, "is even");
});
});
// → 0 is even
// → 2 is even
{{index [array, methods], [array, iteration], "forEach method"}}
There is a built-in array method, forEach
, that provides something
like a for
/of
loop as a higher-order function.
["A", "B"].forEach(l => console.log(l));
// → A
// → B
One area where higher-order functions shine is data processing. To process data, we'll need some actual data. This chapter will use a ((data set)) about scripts—((writing system))s such as Latin, Cyrillic, or Arabic.
Remember ((Unicode)) from Chapter ?, the system that assigns a number to each character in written language? Most of these characters are associated with a specific script. The standard contains 140 different scripts—81 are still in use today, and 59 are historic.
Though I can fluently read only Latin characters, I appreciate the fact that people are writing texts in at least 80 other writing systems, many of which I wouldn't even recognize. For example, here's a sample of ((Tamil)) handwriting:
{{figure {url: "img/tamil.png", alt: "Tamil handwriting"}}}
{{index "SCRIPTS data set"}}
The example ((data set)) contains some pieces of information about the
140 scripts defined in Unicode. It is available in the coding
sandbox for this chapter[
(https://eloquentjavascript.net/code#5)]{if
book} as the SCRIPTS
binding. The binding contains an array of
objects, each of which describes a script.
{
name: "Coptic",
ranges: [[994, 1008], [11392, 11508], [11513, 11520]],
direction: "ltr",
year: -200,
living: false,
link: "https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Coptic_alphabet"
}
Such an object tells us the name of the script, the Unicode ranges
assigned to it, the direction in which it is written, the
(approximate) origin time, whether it is still in use, and a link to
more information. The direction may be "ltr"
for left to right, "rtl"
for right to left (the way Arabic and Hebrew text are written), or
"ttb"
for top to bottom (as with Mongolian writing).
{{index "slice method"}}
The ranges
property contains an array of Unicode character
((range))s, each of which is a two-element array containing a lower bound
and an upper bound. Any character codes within these ranges are assigned
to the script. The lower ((bound)) is inclusive (code 994 is a Coptic
character), and the upper bound is non-inclusive (code 1008 isn't).
{{index [array, methods], [array, filtering], "filter method", [function, "higher-order"], "predicate function"}}
To find the scripts in the data set that are still in use, the following function might be helpful. It filters out the elements in an array that don't pass a test.
function filter(array, test) {
let passed = [];
for (let element of array) {
if (test(element)) {
passed.push(element);
}
}
return passed;
}
console.log(filter(SCRIPTS, script => script.living));
// → [{name: "Adlam", …}, …]
{{index [function, "as value"], [function, application]}}
The function uses the argument named test
, a function value, to fill
a "gap" in the computation—the process of deciding which elements to
collect.
{{index "filter method", "pure function", "side effect"}}
Note how the filter
function, rather than deleting elements from the
existing array, builds up a new array with only the elements that pass
the test. This function is pure. It does not modify the array it is
given.
Like forEach
, filter
is a ((standard)) array method. The example
defined the function only to show what it does internally.
From now on, we'll use it like this instead:
console.log(SCRIPTS.filter(s => s.direction == "ttb"));
// → [{name: "Mongolian", …}, …]
{{id map}}
{{index [array, methods], "map method"}}
Say we have an array of objects representing scripts, produced by
filtering the SCRIPTS
array somehow. But we want an array of names,
which is easier to inspect.
{{index [function, "higher-order"]}}
The map
method transforms an array by applying a function to all of
its elements and building a new array from the returned values. The
new array will have the same length as the input array, but its
content will have been mapped to a new form by the function.
function map(array, transform) {
let mapped = [];
for (let element of array) {
mapped.push(transform(element));
}
return mapped;
}
let rtlScripts = SCRIPTS.filter(s => s.direction == "rtl");
console.log(map(rtlScripts, s => s.name));
// → ["Adlam", "Arabic", "Imperial Aramaic", …]
Like forEach
and filter
, map
is a standard array method.
{{index [array, methods], "summing example", "reduce method"}}
Another common thing to do with arrays is to compute a single value from them. Our recurring example, summing a collection of numbers, is an instance of this. Another example is finding the script with the most characters.
{{indexsee "fold", "reduce method"}}
{{index [function, "higher-order"], "reduce method"}}
The higher-order operation that represents this pattern is called reduce (sometimes also called fold). It builds a value by repeatedly taking a single element from the array and combining it with the current value. When summing numbers, you'd start with the number zero and, for each element, add that to the sum.
The parameters to reduce
are, apart from the array, a combining
function and a start value. This function is a little less
straightforward than filter
and map
, so take a close look at
it:
function reduce(array, combine, start) {
let current = start;
for (let element of array) {
current = combine(current, element);
}
return current;
}
console.log(reduce([1, 2, 3, 4], (a, b) => a + b, 0));
// → 10
{{index "reduce method", "SCRIPTS data set"}}
The standard array method reduce
, which of course corresponds to
this function, has an added convenience. If your array contains at
least one element, you are allowed to leave off the start
argument.
The method will take the first element of the array as its start value
and start reducing at the second element.
console.log([1, 2, 3, 4].reduce((a, b) => a + b));
// → 10
{{index maximum, "characterCount function"}}
To use reduce
(twice) to find the script with the most characters,
we can write something like this:
function characterCount(script) {
return script.ranges.reduce((count, [from, to]) => {
return count + (to - from);
}, 0);
}
console.log(SCRIPTS.reduce((a, b) => {
return characterCount(a) < characterCount(b) ? b : a;
}));
// → {name: "Han", …}
The characterCount
function reduces the ranges assigned to a script
by summing their sizes. Note the use of destructuring in the parameter
list of the reducer function. The second call to reduce
then uses
this to find the largest script by repeatedly comparing two scripts
and returning the larger one.
The Han script has more than 89,000 characters assigned to it in the Unicode standard, making it by far the biggest writing system in the data set. Han is a script (sometimes) used for Chinese, Japanese, and Korean text. Those languages share a lot of characters, though they tend to write them differently. The (U.S.-based) Unicode Consortium decided to treat them as a single writing system to save character codes. This is called Han unification and still makes some people very angry.
{{index loop, maximum}}
Consider how we would have written the previous example (finding the biggest script) without higher-order functions. The code is not that much worse.
let biggest = null;
for (let script of SCRIPTS) {
if (biggest == null ||
characterCount(biggest) < characterCount(script)) {
biggest = script;
}
}
console.log(biggest);
// → {name: "Han", …}
There are a few more bindings, and the program is four lines longer. But it is still very readable.
{{index "average function", composability, [function, "higher-order"], "filter method", "map method", "reduce method"}}
{{id average_function}}
Higher-order functions start to shine when you need to compose operations. As an example, let's write code that finds the average year of origin for living and dead scripts in the data set.
function average(array) {
return array.reduce((a, b) => a + b) / array.length;
}
console.log(Math.round(average(
SCRIPTS.filter(s => s.living).map(s => s.year))));
// → 1188
console.log(Math.round(average(
SCRIPTS.filter(s => !s.living).map(s => s.year))));
// → 188
So the dead scripts in Unicode are, on average, older than the living ones. This is not a terribly meaningful or surprising statistic. But I hope you'll agree that the code used to compute it isn't hard to read. You can see it as a pipeline: we start with all scripts, filter out the living (or dead) ones, take the years from those, average them, and round the result.
You could definitely also write this computation as one big ((loop)).
let total = 0, count = 0;
for (let script of SCRIPTS) {
if (script.living) {
total += script.year;
count += 1;
}
}
console.log(Math.round(total / count));
// → 1188
But it is harder to see what was being computed and how. And because
intermediate results aren't represented as coherent values, it'd be a
lot more work to extract something like average
into a separate
function.
{{index efficiency, [array, creation]}}
In terms of what the computer is actually doing, these two approaches
are also quite different. The first will build up new arrays when
running filter
and map
, whereas the second computes only some
numbers, doing less work. You can usually afford the readable
approach, but if you're processing huge arrays, and doing so many
times, the less abstract style might be worth the extra speed.
{{index "SCRIPTS data set"}}
One use of the data set would be figuring out what script a piece of text is using. Let's go through a program that does this.
Remember that each script has an array of character code ranges associated with it. So given a character code, we could use a function like this to find the corresponding script (if any):
{{index "some method", "predicate function", [array, methods]}}
function characterScript(code) {
for (let script of SCRIPTS) {
if (script.ranges.some(([from, to]) => {
return code >= from && code < to;
})) {
return script;
}
}
return null;
}
console.log(characterScript(121));
// → {name: "Latin", …}
The some
method is another higher-order function. It takes a test
function and tells you whether that function returns true for any of the
elements in the array.
{{id code_units}}
But how do we get the character codes in a string?
In Chapter ? I mentioned that JavaScript ((string))s are encoded as a sequence of 16-bit numbers. These are called ((code unit))s. A ((Unicode)) ((character)) code was initially supposed to fit within such a unit (which gives you a little over 65,000 characters). When it became clear that wasn't going to be enough, many people balked at the need to use more memory per character. To address these concerns, ((UTF-16)), the format used by JavaScript strings, was invented. It describes most common characters using a single 16-bit code unit but uses a pair of two such units for others.
{{index error}}
UTF-16 is generally considered a bad idea today. It seems almost intentionally designed to invite mistakes. It's easy to write programs that pretend code units and characters are the same thing. And if your language doesn't use two-unit characters, that will appear to work just fine. But as soon as someone tries to use such a program with some less common ((Chinese characters)), it breaks. Fortunately, with the advent of ((emoji)), everybody has started using two-unit characters, and the burden of dealing with such problems is more fairly distributed.
{{index [string, length], [string, indexing], "charCodeAt method"}}
Unfortunately, obvious operations on JavaScript strings, such as
getting their length through the length
property and accessing their
content using square brackets, deal only with code units.
// Two emoji characters, horse and shoe
let horseShoe = "🐴👟";
console.log(horseShoe.length);
// → 4
console.log(horseShoe[0]);
// → (Invalid half-character)
console.log(horseShoe.charCodeAt(0));
// → 55357 (Code of the half-character)
console.log(horseShoe.codePointAt(0));
// → 128052 (Actual code for horse emoji)
{{index "codePointAt method"}}
JavaScript's charCodeAt
method gives you a code unit, not a full
character code. The codePointAt
method, added later, does give a
full Unicode character. So we could use that to get characters from a
string. But the argument passed to codePointAt
is still an index
into the sequence of code units. So to run over all characters in a
string, we'd still need to deal with the question of whether a
character takes up one or two code units.
{{index "for/of loop", character}}
In the previous chapter, I mentioned that a
for
/of
loop can also be used on strings. Like codePointAt
, this
type of loop was introduced at a time where people were acutely aware
of the problems with UTF-16. When you use it to loop over a string, it
gives you real characters, not code units.
let roseDragon = "🌹🐉";
for (let char of roseDragon) {
console.log(char);
}
// → 🌹
// → 🐉
If you have a character (which will be a string of one or two code
units), you can use codePointAt(0)
to get its code.
{{index "SCRIPTS data set", "countBy function", [array, counting]}}
We have a characterScript
function and a way to correctly loop over
characters. The next step is to count the characters that belong
to each script. The following counting abstraction will be useful
there:
function countBy(items, groupName) {
let counts = [];
for (let item of items) {
let name = groupName(item);
let known = counts.findIndex(c => c.name == name);
if (known == -1) {
counts.push({name, count: 1});
} else {
counts[known].count++;
}
}
return counts;
}
console.log(countBy([1, 2, 3, 4, 5], n => n > 2));
// → [{name: false, count: 2}, {name: true, count: 3}]
The countBy
function expects a collection (anything that we can loop
over with for
/of
) and a function that computes a group name for a
given element. It returns an array of
objects, each of which names a group and tells you the number of
elements that were found in that group.
{{index "findIndex method", "indexOf method"}}
It uses another array method—findIndex
. This method is somewhat like
indexOf
, but instead of looking for a specific value, it finds the
first value for which the given function returns true. Like indexOf
,
it returns -1 when no such element is found.
{{index "textScripts function", "Chinese characters"}}
Using countBy
, we can write the function that tells us which scripts
are used in a piece of text.
function textScripts(text) {
let scripts = countBy(text, char => {
let script = characterScript(char.codePointAt(0));
return script ? script.name : "none";
}).filter(({name}) => name != "none");
let total = scripts.reduce((n, {count}) => n + count, 0);
if (total == 0) return "No scripts found";
return scripts.map(({name, count}) => {
return `${Math.round(count * 100 / total)}% ${name}`;
}).join(", ");
}
console.log(textScripts('英国的狗说"woof", 俄罗斯的狗说"тяв"'));
// → 61% Han, 22% Latin, 17% Cyrillic
{{index "characterScript function", "filter method"}}
The function first counts the characters by name, using
characterScript
to assign them a name and falling back to the
string "none"
for characters that aren't part of any script. The
filter
call drops the entry for "none"
from the resulting array
since we aren't interested in those characters.
{{index "reduce method", "map method", "join method", [array, methods]}}
To be able to compute ((percentage))s, we first need the total number
of characters that belong to a script, which we can compute with
reduce
. If no such characters are found, the function returns a
specific string. Otherwise, it transforms the counting entries into
readable strings with map
and then combines them with join
.
Being able to pass function values to other functions is a deeply useful aspect of JavaScript. It allows us to write functions that model computations with "gaps" in them. The code that calls these functions can fill in the gaps by providing function values.
Arrays provide a number of useful higher-order methods. You can use
forEach
to loop over the elements in an array. The filter
method
returns a new array containing only the elements that pass the
((predicate function)). Transforming an array by putting each element
through a function is done with map
. You can use reduce
to combine
all the elements in an array into a single value. The some
method
tests whether any element matches a given predicate function. And
findIndex
finds the position of the first element that matches a
predicate.
{{index "flattening (exercise)", "reduce method", "concat method", [array, flattening]}}
Use the reduce
method in combination with the concat
method to
"flatten" an array of arrays into a single array that has all the
elements of the original arrays.
{{if interactive
let arrays = [[1, 2, 3], [4, 5], [6]];
// Your code here.
// → [1, 2, 3, 4, 5, 6]
if}}
{{index "your own loop (example)", "for loop"}}
Write a higher-order function loop
that provides something like a
for
loop statement. It takes a value, a test function, an update
function, and a body function. Each iteration, it first runs the test
function on the current loop value and stops if that returns false.
Then it calls the body function, giving it the current value.
Finally, it calls the update function to create a new value and
starts from the beginning.
When defining the function, you can use a regular loop to do the actual looping.
{{if interactive
// Your code here.
loop(3, n => n > 0, n => n - 1, console.log);
// → 3
// → 2
// → 1
if}}
{{index "predicate function", "everything (exercise)", "every method", "some method", [array, methods], "&& operator", "|| operator"}}
Analogous to the some
method, arrays also have an every
method.
This one returns true when the given function returns true for every
element in the array. In a way, some
is a version of the ||
operator that acts on arrays, and every
is like the &&
operator.
Implement every
as a function that takes an array and a predicate
function as parameters. Write two versions, one using a loop and one
using the some
method.
{{if interactive
function every(array, test) {
// Your code here.
}
console.log(every([1, 3, 5], n => n < 10));
// → true
console.log(every([2, 4, 16], n => n < 10));
// → false
console.log(every([], n => n < 10));
// → true
if}}
{{hint
{{index "everything (exercise)", "short-circuit evaluation", "return keyword"}}
Like the &&
operator, the every
method can stop evaluating further
elements as soon as it has found one that doesn't match. So the
loop-based version can jump out of the loop—with break
or
return
—as soon as it runs into an element for which the predicate
function returns false. If the loop runs to its end without finding
such an element, we know that all elements matched and we should
return true.
To build every
on top of some
, we can apply ((De Morgan's
laws)), which state that a && b
equals !(!a || !b)
. This can be
generalized to arrays, where all elements in the array match if there
is no element in the array that does not match.
hint}}
{{index "SCRIPTS data set", "direction (writing)", "groupBy function", "dominant direction (exercise)"}}
Write a function that computes the dominant writing direction in a
string of text. Remember that each script object has a direction
property that can be "ltr"
(left to right), "rtl"
(right to left),
or "ttb"
(top to bottom).
{{index "characterScript function", "countBy function"}}
The dominant direction is the direction of a majority of the
characters that have a script associated with them. The
characterScript
and countBy
functions defined earlier in the
chapter are probably useful here.
{{if interactive
function dominantDirection(text) {
// Your code here.
}
console.log(dominantDirection("Hello!"));
// → ltr
console.log(dominantDirection("Hey, مساء الخير"));
// → rtl
if}}
{{hint
{{index "dominant direction (exercise)", "textScripts function", "filter method", "characterScript function"}}
Your solution might look a lot like the first half of the
textScripts
example. You again have to count characters by a
criterion based on characterScript
and then filter out the part of
the result that refers to uninteresting (script-less) characters.
{{index "reduce method"}}
Finding the direction with the highest character count can be done
with reduce
. If it's not clear how, refer to the example
earlier in the chapter, where reduce
was used to find the script
with the most characters.
hint}}