I need a function which takes an arbitrary number of arguments (All of the same type), does something with them and afterwards gives a result back. A list of arguments is impracticable in my specific case.
As I looked through the haskell libs, I saw that the function printf
(from module Text.Printf
) uses a similar trick. Unfortunately, I couldn't understand that magic by looking at the source.
Can somebody explain how to achieve this, or at least some webpage/paper/whatever where I could find a good description for this?
Motivation:
The reason I need this is really quite simple. For school (computer science class), we are required to write a module that is able to "record" a mathematical expression, express it as a string (Via writing an instance of Num/Real/etc for an own datatype), and perform various operations on it.
This datatype contains a special constructor for a variable, which may be replaced by a value or whatever by a specified function. One of the goals is to write a function, which takes such an expression with some number of variables (pairs of type (Char,Rational)
) and calculates the result of the expression. We should look at how to express the goal of the function best. (My idea: The function returns another function which takes exactly as many arguments as vars that are defined in the function - seems to be impossible).
Question&Answers:
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