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This is just example code to show what currying is able to do, but maybe not the "proper" way to write code. My reading is that the curry goes into each old script. Let's assume there is only one or two. In real life code, you would not want to change the way a library function gets called, you would instead add a new library function that is separate from the older one, so that old code will not require changes. But then the Exegesis would not explain how currying works, and that was the whole point of talking about it in the first place.


In reply to Re: Re: Re: Perl 6 Exegesis 6 pg 7 by bunnyman
in thread Perl 6 Exegesis 6 pg 7 by TomDLux

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