Comment by AdieuToLogic
1 year ago
A key thing to keep in mind is that the thrush combinator is a fancy name for a simple construct. The semantics it provides is a declarative form of traditional function composition.
For example, given the expression:
f (g (h (x)))
The same can be expressed in languages which support the "|>" infix operator as:
h (x) |> g |> f
There are other, equivalent, constructs such as the Cats Arrow[0] type class available in Scala, the same Arrow[1] concept available in Haskell, and the `andThen` method commonly available in many modern programming languages.
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