← Back to context Comment by DanielHB 2 days ago what do you mean by "arrow operator"? 5 comments DanielHB Reply amiga386 2 days ago Probably a reference to Clojure's arrow operator:https://blog.frankel.ch/learning-clojure/2/Something like a(b(c(d(e(7)))))) in Javascript could be written (-> 7 e d c b a) in Clojure? balamatom 2 days ago Bingo. lionkor 2 days ago Maybe overloadable operators like in C++, where -> usually demotes some kind of deeper access into the object or abstraction? Or, the opposite, and abstracted access. DanielHB 2 days ago That is what I thought, but that doesn't make sense for a language without pointersAccording to the other comment it seems he meant the |> pipe operator that is under proposal in js
amiga386 2 days ago Probably a reference to Clojure's arrow operator:https://blog.frankel.ch/learning-clojure/2/Something like a(b(c(d(e(7)))))) in Javascript could be written (-> 7 e d c b a) in Clojure? balamatom 2 days ago Bingo.
lionkor 2 days ago Maybe overloadable operators like in C++, where -> usually demotes some kind of deeper access into the object or abstraction? Or, the opposite, and abstracted access. DanielHB 2 days ago That is what I thought, but that doesn't make sense for a language without pointersAccording to the other comment it seems he meant the |> pipe operator that is under proposal in js
DanielHB 2 days ago That is what I thought, but that doesn't make sense for a language without pointersAccording to the other comment it seems he meant the |> pipe operator that is under proposal in js
Probably a reference to Clojure's arrow operator:
https://blog.frankel.ch/learning-clojure/2/
Something like a(b(c(d(e(7)))))) in Javascript could be written (-> 7 e d c b a) in Clojure?
Bingo.
Maybe overloadable operators like in C++, where -> usually demotes some kind of deeper access into the object or abstraction? Or, the opposite, and abstracted access.
That is what I thought, but that doesn't make sense for a language without pointers
According to the other comment it seems he meant the |> pipe operator that is under proposal in js