Negate
Negate
is a curried constructor used to create a JS/JSON configuration
object that represents a negation operation.
The first parameter to Negate
determines the datatype of the return
value of the negation operation: Number
(float) or Integer
.
The second parameter is an operation that must eventually evaluate to a numerical value. This is the operand for which we will calculate the negation.
The operand operation (add, subtract, etc.) may include nested operations to any depth, but the bottom (leaf) nodes must return values. Values are injected with injectors.
Because Negate
is curried, we can simplify our code by partial application,
for example,
const Neg = Negate("Integer")
. This returns a function that
takes the operand operation and returns an Negate configuration object for
working with integers.
See below for an example.
The negate
function
We pass our configuration object to composeOperators
, which composes the operations and returns a single function. This
function takes an optional argument and returns the result of the
calculation as a Right
, e.g., { right: 42 }
, or a Left
with an array of Error
objects,
{ left: [Error] }
.
composeOperators
works by recursing down through the
operation
object, calling the correct operator function based on
the tag
(e.g., "Negate"), and composing the functions returned.
composeOperators
then returns this composed function. See composeOperators
for a more detailed explanation.
The injectors are not called until this composed calculate
function
is run. Hence, evaluation is lazy: the values are not injected until the last
moment.
See the injectors for a complete list of how values may be injected. See the list of operators for the full range of available mathematical operations.
Example
We use composeOperators
to create a calculate
function, passing it our Negate
operation object. We call the calculate
function and pass it an
(optional) argument to run our operation(s) and calculate the product.
Here our operation includes an operand in which the value is
passed in via the optional argument to calculate
. This is done
using FromArgument
.
Try leaving one of the numbers undefined to see an Error
returned.