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jdantonio/functional-ruby

A gem for adding functional programming tools to Ruby. Inspired by Erlang, Clojure, Haskell, and Functional Java.

jdantonio/functional-ruby.json
{
"createdAt": "2013-05-04T11:07:02Z",
"defaultBranch": "master",
"description": "A gem for adding functional programming tools to Ruby. Inspired by Erlang, Clojure, Haskell, and Functional Java.",
"fullName": "jdantonio/functional-ruby",
"homepage": "http://www.functional-ruby.com",
"language": "Ruby",
"name": "functional-ruby",
"pushedAt": "2018-01-09T16:01:47Z",
"stargazersCount": 550,
"topics": [],
"updatedAt": "2025-06-05T18:06:54Z",
"url": "https://github.com/jdantonio/functional-ruby"
}

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A gem for adding functional programming tools to Ruby. Inspired by Erlang, Clojure, and Functional Java.

Two things I love are Ruby and functional programming. If you combine Ruby’s ability to create functions sans-classes with the power of blocks, proc, and lambda, Ruby code can follow just about every modern functional programming design paradigm. Add to this Ruby’s vast metaprogramming capabilities and Ruby is easily one of the most powerful languages in common use today.

Our goal is to implement various functional programming patterns in Ruby. Specifically:

  • Be an ‘unopinionated’ toolbox that provides useful utilities without debating which is better or why
  • Remain free of external gem dependencies
  • Stay true to the spirit of the languages providing inspiration
  • But implement in a way that makes sense for Ruby
  • Keep the semantics as idiomatic Ruby as possible
  • Support features that make sense in Ruby
  • Exclude features that don’t make sense in Ruby
  • Keep everything small
  • Be as fast as reasonably possible

The primary site for documentation is the automatically generated API documentation.

  • Protocol specifications inspired by Clojure protocol, Erlang behavior, and Objective-C protocol.
  • Function overloading with Erlang-style function pattern matching.
  • Simple, thread safe, immutable data structures, such as Record, Union, and Tuple, inspired by Clojure, Erlang, and other functional languages.
  • Thread safe, immutable Either and Option classes based on Functional Java and Haskell.
  • Memoization of class methods based on Clojure memoize.
  • Lazy execution with a Delay class based on Clojure delay.
  • ValueStruct, a simple, thread safe, immutable variation of Ruby’s OpenStruct class.
  • Thread safe data structures, such as FinalStruct and FinalVar, which can be written to at most once before becoming immutable. Based on Java’s final keyword.

MRI 2.0 and higher, JRuby (1.9 mode), and Rubinius 2.x. This library is pure Ruby and has no gem dependencies. It should be fully compatible with any interpreter that is compliant with Ruby 2.0 or newer.

Terminal window
gem install functional-ruby

or add the following line to Gemfile:

gem 'functional-ruby'

and run bundle install from your shell.

Once you’ve installed the gem you must require it in your project:

require 'functional'

Specifying a protocol:

Functional::SpecifyProtocol(:Name) do
attr_accessor :first
attr_accessor :middle
attr_accessor :last
attr_accessor :suffix
end

Defining immutable data structures including Either, Option, Union and Record

Name = Functional::Record.new(:first, :middle, :last, :suffix) do
mandatory :first, :last
default :first, 'J.'
default :last, 'Doe'
end
anon = Name.new #=> #<record Name :first=>"J.", :middle=>nil, :last=>"Doe", :suffix=>nil>
matz = Name.new(first: 'Yukihiro', last: 'Matsumoto') #=> #<record Name :first=>"Yukihiro", :middle=>nil, :last=>"Matsumoto", :suffix=>nil>

Pattern matching using protocols, type checking, and other options:

class Foo
include Functional::PatternMatching
include Functional::Protocol
include Functional::TypeCheck
def greet
return 'Hello, World!'
end
defn(:greet, _) do |name|
"Hello, #{name}!"
end
defn(:greet, _) { |name|
"Pleased to meet you, #{name.full_name}!"
}.when {|name| Type?(name, CustomerModel, ClientModel) }
defn(:greet, _) { |name|
"Hello, #{name.first} #{name.last}!"
}.when {|name| Satisfy?(name, :Name) }
defn(:greet, :doctor, _) { |name|
"Hello, Dr. #{name}!"
}
defn(:greet, nil, _) { |name|
"Goodbye, #{name}!"
}
defn(:greet, _, _) { |_, name|
"Hello, #{name}!"
}
end

Performance improvement of idempotent functions through memoization:

class Factors
include Functional::Memo
def self.sum_of(number)
of(number).reduce(:+)
end
def self.of(number)
(1..number).select {|i| factor?(number, i)}
end
def self.factor?(number, potential)
number % potential == 0
end
memoize(:sum_of)
memoize(:of)
end
  1. Fork it
  2. Create your feature branch (git checkout -b my-new-feature)
  3. Commit your changes (git commit -am 'Add some feature')
  4. Push to the branch (git push origin my-new-feature)
  5. Create new Pull Request

Functional Ruby is free software released under the MIT License.