A partial function is a function that is valid for only a subset of values of those types you might pass in to it. For example:
val root: PartialFunction[Double,Double] = {
case d if (d >= 0) => math.sqrt(d)
}
scala> root.isDefinedAt(-1)
res0: Boolean = false
scala> root(3)
res1: Double = 1.7320508075688772
This is useful when you have something that knows how to check whether a function is defined or not. Collect, for instance:
scala> List(0.5, -0.2, 4).collect(root) // List of _only roots which are defined_
res2: List[Double] = List(0.7071067811865476, 2.0)
This is not going to help you place two arguments where you really want one.
In contrast, a partially applied function is a function where some of its arguments have already been filled in.
def add(i: Int, j: Int) = i + j
val add5 = add(_: Int,5)
Now you only need one argument--the thing to add 5 to--instead of two:
scala> add5(2)
res3: Int = 7
You can see from this example how to use it.
But if you need to specify those two arguments, this still won't do it--say you want to use map
, for instance, and you need to give it a function of one argument, but you want it to add two different things. Well, then you can
val addTupled = (add _).tupled
which will partially apply the function (really, just create a function out of the method, since nothing has been filled in) and then combine the separate arguments into a tuple. Now you can use this in places that require a single argument (assuming that the type is correct):
scala> List((1,2), (4,5), (3,8)).map(addTupled)
res4: List[Int] = List(3, 9, 11)
In contrast, currying is different yet again; it turns functions of the form (A,B) => C
into A => B => C
. That is, given a function of multiple arguments, it will produce a chain of functions that each take one argument and return a chain one shorter (you can think of it as partially applying one argument at a time).
val addCurried = (add _).curried
scala> List(1,4,3).map(addCurried)
res5: List[Int => Int] = List(<function1>, <function1>, <function1>)
scala> res5.head(2) // is the first function, should add 1
res6: Int = 3
scala> res5.tail.head(5) // Second function should add 4
res7: Int = 9
scala> res5.last(8) // Third function should add 3
res8: Int = 11