--- title: Clojure auto curry date: 2021-04-24 1 updated_at: 2021-04-27 layout: post lang: en ref: clojure-auto-curry --- Here's a simple macro defined by [Loretta He][lorettahe] to create Clojure functions that are curried on all arguments, relying on Clojure's multi-arity support: ```clojure (defmacro defcurry [name args & body] (let [partials (map (fn [n] `(~(subvec args 0 n) (partial ~name ~@(take n args)))) (range 1 (count args)))] `(defn ~name (~args ~@body) ~@partials))) ``` A naive `add` definition, alongside its usage and macroexpansion: ```clojure user=> (defcurry add [a b c d e] (+ 1 2 3 4 5)) #'user/add user=> (add 1) #object[clojure.core$partial$fn__5857 0x2c708440 "clojure.core$partial$fn__5857@2c708440"] user=> (add 1 2 3 4) #object[clojure.core$partial$fn__5863 0xf4c0e4e "clojure.core$partial$fn__5863@f4c0e4e"] user=> ((add 1) 2 3 4 5) 15 user=> (((add 1) 2 3) 4 5) 15 user=> (use 'clojure.pprint) nil user=> (pprint (macroexpand '(defcurry add [a b c d e] (+ 1 2 3 4 5)))) (def add (clojure.core/fn ([a b c d e] (+ 1 2 3 4 5)) ([a] (clojure.core/partial add a)) ([a b] (clojure.core/partial add a b)) ([a b c] (clojure.core/partial add a b c)) ([a b c d] (clojure.core/partial add a b c d)))) nil ``` This simplistic `defcurry` definition doesn't support optional parameters, multi-arity, `&` rest arguments, docstrings, etc., but it could certainly evolve to do so. I like how `defcurry` is so short, and abdicates the responsability of doing the multi-arity logic to Clojure's built-in multi-arity support. Simple and elegant. Same Clojure as before, now with auto-currying via macros. [lorettahe]: http://lorettahe.github.io/clojure/2016/09/22/clojure-auto-curry ## Comparison with Common Lisp My attempt at writing an equivalent for Common Lisp gives me: ```lisp (defun partial (fn &rest args) (lambda (&rest args2) (apply fn (append args args2)))) (defun curry-n (n func) (cond ((< n 0) (error "Too many arguments")) ((zerop n) (funcall func)) (t (lambda (&rest rest) (curry-n (- n (length rest)) (apply #'partial func rest)))))) (defmacro defcurry (name args &body body) `(defun ,name (&rest rest) (let ((func (lambda ,args ,@body))) (curry-n (- ,(length args) (length rest)) (apply #'partial func rest))))) ``` Without built-in multi-arity support, we have to do more work, like tracking the number of arguments consumed so far. We also have to write `#'partial` ourselves. That is, without dependending on any library, sticking to ANSI Common Lisp. The usage is pretty similar: ```lisp * (defcurry add (a b c d e) (+ a b c d e)) ADD * (add 1) # * (funcall (add 1) 2 3 4) # * (funcall (add 1) 2 3 4 5) 15 * (funcall (funcall (add 1) 2 3) 4 5) 15 * (macroexpand-1 '(defcurry add (a b c d e) (+ a b c d e))) (DEFUN ADD (&REST REST) (LET ((FUNC (LAMBDA (A B C D E) (+ A B C D E)))) (CURRY-N (- 5 (LENGTH REST)) (APPLY #'PARTIAL FUNC REST)))) T ``` This also require `funcall`s, since we return a `lambda` that doesn't live in the function namespace. Like the Clojure one, it doesn't support optional parameters, `&rest` rest arguments, docstrings, etc., but it also could evolve to do so.