--- id: 587d7dab367417b2b2512b70 title: Introduction to Currying and Partial Application challengeType: 1 forumTopicId: 301232 --- ## Description <section id='description'> The <dfn>arity</dfn> of a function is the number of arguments it requires. <dfn>Currying</dfn> a function means to convert a function of N arity into N functions of arity 1. In other words, it restructures a function so it takes one argument, then returns another function that takes the next argument, and so on. Here's an example: ```js //Un-curried function function unCurried(x, y) { return x + y; } //Curried function function curried(x) { return function(y) { return x + y; } } //Alternative using ES6 const curried = x => y => x + y curried(1)(2) // Returns 3 ``` This is useful in your program if you can't supply all the arguments to a function at one time. You can save each function call into a variable, which will hold the returned function reference that takes the next argument when it's available. Here's an example using the curried function in the example above: ```js // Call a curried function in parts: var funcForY = curried(1); console.log(funcForY(2)); // Prints 3 ``` Similarly, <dfn>partial application</dfn> can be described as applying a few arguments to a function at a time and returning another function that is applied to more arguments. Here's an example: ```js //Impartial function function impartial(x, y, z) { return x + y + z; } var partialFn = impartial.bind(this, 1, 2); partialFn(10); // Returns 13 ``` </section> ## Instructions <section id='instructions'> Fill in the body of the <code>add</code> function so it uses currying to add parameters <code>x</code>, <code>y</code>, and <code>z</code>. </section> ## Tests <section id='tests'> ```yml tests: - text: <code>add(10)(20)(30)</code> should return <code>60</code>. testString: assert(add(10)(20)(30) === 60); - text: <code>add(1)(2)(3)</code> should return <code>6</code>. testString: assert(add(1)(2)(3) === 6); - text: <code>add(11)(22)(33)</code> should return <code>66</code>. testString: assert(add(11)(22)(33) === 66); - text: Your code should include a final statement that returns <code>x + y + z</code>. testString: assert(code.match(/[xyz]\s*?\+\s*?[xyz]\s*?\+\s*?[xyz]/g)); ``` </section> ## Challenge Seed <section id='challengeSeed'> <div id='js-seed'> ```js function add(x) { // Only change code below this line // Only change code above this line } add(10)(20)(30); ``` </div> </section> ## Solution <section id='solution'> ```js const add = x => y => z => x + y + z ``` </section>