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Anthony Gonzalez
Anthony Gonzalez

Posted on • Edited on • Originally published at elixirprogrammer.com

Write Better Code With [Functional Programming & Elixir]

The Beauty Of Functional Programming With Elixir

Writing code can get messy, especially when you are a beginner, sometimes you focus so much on making the code work that you forget how hard to read and understand it is, you might start using lots of if-else statements and make pretty long and confusing functions that do multiple things, making it difficult to maintain.

Let me tell you a little secret that senior developers don't tell you, they practice functional programming paradigms, functional programming may not be too popular, but learning those concepts can make you a better developer. Let's dive in with a simple example using the Elixir programming language.

defmodule Person do
    def can_drink(age) do
        if age != nil do
            cond do
                age < 18 ->
                    "Nope!"
                age < 21 ->
                    "Not in the US!"
                true ->
                "YES!!!"
            end
        else
            "You're not a Person!"
        end
    end
end

IO.puts Person.can_drink(age)
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In that example, the module Person will check the age that is passed into the can_drink(age) function for legal drinking age, and return a string, conditionals in elixir are a simpler way to create if-else statements but we can make it way better.

defmodule Person do
    def can_drink(age) do
        if age != nil do
            cond do
                age < 18 ->
                    "Nope!"
                age < 21 ->
                    "Not in the US!"
                true ->
                "YES!!!"
            end
        else
            "You're not a Person!"
        end
    end

    def can_drink_better(age) do
        legal(age)
    end
end

IO.puts Person.can_drink(age)
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We added the can_drink_better(age) function which calls a legal function, so now let's create the legal function.

defmodule Person do
    def can_drink(age) do
        if age != nil do
            cond do
                age < 18 ->
                    "Nope!"
                age < 21 ->
                    "Not in the US!"
                true ->
                "YES!!!"
            end
        else
            "You're not a Person!"
        end
    end

    def can_drink_better(age) do
        legal(age)
    end

    def legal(age) when is_nil(age), do: "You're not a Person"
    def legal(age) when age < 18, do: "Nope!"
    def legal(age) when age < 21, do: "Not in the US!"
    def legal(age) when age >= 21, do: "YES!!!"
end

IO.puts Person.can_drink_better(age)
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We created 4 legal(age) functions in the short inline form, the first checks if age is nil, it has to be the first function that it gets called, in elixir functions are called from top to bottom, because if it's placed at the bottom when age >= 21 will always be true due that nil it's not an integer.

It might look a little bit confusing if you come from another language, in Elixir you can call a function with the same name multiple times once until all the conditions are met, that's the beauty of functional programming. So now we can just remove the conditional function and be amazed by the awesome result.

defmodule Person do
    def can_drink(age) when is_nil(age), do: "You're not a Person"
    def can_drink(age) when age < 18, do: "Nope!"
    def can_drink(age) when age < 21, do: "Not in the US!"
    def can_drink(age) when age >= 21, do: "YES!!!"
end

IO.puts Person.can_drink(age)
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Now our code looks cleaner than a baby's mind, functional programming with Elixir is an exquisite dish served in a 5 stars international restaurant.

 
 

 
 

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Top comments (14)

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aminmansuri profile image
hidden_dude

Prolog solution is better:

legal_message(Age, "Nope!") :- Age < 18.
legal_message(Age, "Not in the US") :- Age < 21, Age >= 18.
legal_message(Age, "YES!!!") :- Age >= 21.

The nil message is not even necessary it's implicit.

My paradigm is better than yours I win. ;)

I can even have several results for a single case in Prolog. And it's more truly declarative than most FP languages.

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aminmansuri profile image
hidden_dude

But in all seriousness real OO is directly against case statements like these.

It intends to group decisions about the kind of thing you have in a single place.

So an OO way of doing this would be to compute an Age class on a person and then have all Age rules apply to that age class.

So you could ask a person what age classification they have like Senior, Adult, Child, etc.. and all things related to being an Adult or Child would center there.

This is overkill of course, but that would be the OO spirit.

In Java this can be approximated with the very non-OO enum operator that can make these sorts of minimal type classes quite easy to build.

But the idea of removing if-elses is so that your program isn't riddled with the same if-else all over the place but maybe in only on place.

Of course often a simple if-else is just simpler then some complex idiom like subscribing age values to behavior via callbacks or listeners.

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aminmansuri profile image
hidden_dude • Edited

But here's a modern Java example:

var legalMessage = new ImmutableRangeMap.<Integer, String>builder()
   .put(null, "You're not a Person")
   .put(lessThan(18), "Nope!!")
   .put(closedOpen(18,21), "Not in the US!!")
   .put(atLeast(21), "YES!!!")
   .build();

System.out.println(legalMessage.get(age));
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In OO it's all about whether you're using the right objects or not. Many times people get sloppy. (This data structure comes from the Guava library)

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elixirprogrammer profile image
Anthony Gonzalez

Nice one! Hard to believe that's Java. I agree, you can get sloppy with any language, even with Elixir, check this example:

def handle_event("upvote", %{"p_id" => post_id, "u_id" => user_id}, socket) do
    if user_id == "false" do
      {:noreply, redirect(socket, to: Routes.pow_session_path(socket, :new), replace: true)}
    else
      user = Repo.get!(User, user_id)
      post = Community.get_post!(post_id)
      vote = %Vote{}

      case current_user_voted?(user_id, post_id) do
        "" ->
          case Votes.create_vote(user, post, vote) do
            {:ok, _vote} ->
              User.karma_update(user_id, 1)
              post = Community.get_post!(post_id)
              if post.votes_count == -1 do
                Community.votes_count_update(post_id, 2)
              else
                Community.votes_count_update(post_id, 1)
              end
              post = Community.get_post!(post_id)
              socket =
                assign(socket,
                p_votes_count: post.votes_count,
                active?: "active",
                p_id: post_id,
                u_id: user_id)

              {:noreply, socket}
            {:error, %Ecto.Changeset{} = changeset} ->
              socket = assign(socket, changeset: changeset)
              {:noreply, socket}
          end
        "active" ->
            Votes.delete_vote(Votes.find_vote(user_id, post_id))
            User.karma_update(user_id, -1)
            Community.votes_count_update(post_id, -1)
            post = Community.get_post!(post_id)
            socket =
            assign(socket,
            p_votes_count: post.votes_count,
            active?: "",
            p_id: post_id,
            u_id: user_id)
          {:noreply, socket}
        nil ->
          vote = Votes.find_vote(user_id, post_id)
          case Votes.update_vote(vote, %{downvote: false}) do
            {:ok, _vote} ->
              User.karma_update(user_id, 1)
              post = Community.get_post!(post_id)
              if post.votes_count == -1 do
                Community.votes_count_update(post_id, 2)
              else
                Community.votes_count_update(post_id, 1)
              end
              post = Community.get_post!(post_id)
              socket =
              assign(socket,
              p_votes_count: post.votes_count,
              active?: "active",
              active_dislike?: "",
              p_id: post_id,
              u_id: user_id)

              {:noreply, socket}

            {:error, %Ecto.Changeset{} = changeset} ->
              socket = assign(socket, changeset: changeset)
              {:noreply, socket}
        end
      end
    end
  end

defp current_user_voted?(user_id, post_id) do
    if user_id == false or user_id == "false" do
      ""
    else
      voted? = Votes.find_vote(user_id, post_id)
      if voted? == nil do
        ""
      else
        if voted?.downvote == true do
          nil
        else
          "active"
        end
      end
    end
end
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aminmansuri profile image
hidden_dude • Edited

Yeah that needs refactoring.

Also overuse of if/else and case is not helped with FP popular error handling these days.

A nice thing about exceptions is that you can essentially ignore errors in most places rather than having and if/else everywhere or an error handler everywhere.

That style seems to be devolving into old styles where error handling is mixed in with the happy path making the code harder to read.

Classic OO (Smalltalk) and classic FP (if you consider Common Lisp FP) didn't even really have "if statements" or "case statements".

These were handled in the libraries.

I think modern OO languages biggest flaw is there over reliance on statements and keywords that make them much less extendable than Smalltalk or Lisp where you could literally change everything by extending the libraries.

Really no "modern" OO language really has that flexibility and clean design. Not Java, not C++, not C#, not Ruby, not Python, not JavaScript.

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andreidascalu profile image
Andrei Dascalu

Well, thing is OOP by its 4 pillars nudges you towards shooting yourself in the foot in the long run. All the attempts to fix the paradigm are actually borrowing from FP.

Ever since I dove into DDD and saw its reliance on immutability I've been failing to see any inherent merit of OOP (aside from having become historically dominant for a long time, mostly due to functional paradigms being fairly compute inneficient)

 
elixirprogrammer profile image
Anthony Gonzalez

I agree, I'm not saying that is better by any means, it's just another tool to get the job done. We all think differently, we can solve the same problems in multiple ways, it is always going to depend on what makes us feel comfortable in our brains.

 
elixirprogrammer profile image
Anthony Gonzalez

Sure, that would be a really interesting series, I'm down!

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lukehaf profile image
Luke Hafermann

I appreciate seeing two people dig through their opinions to find some common ground. Then agreeing to build from there. Thanks for the constructive info- finding! 👍

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elixirprogrammer profile image
Anthony Gonzalez

I guess you mean to remove the can_drink() function and rename legal() to can_drink() like the example below:

defmodule Person do
  def can_drink(age) when is_nil(age), do: "You're not a Person"
  def can_drink(age) when age < 18, do: "Nope!"
  def can_drink(age) when age < 21, do: "Not in the US!"
  def can_drink(age) when age >= 21, do: "YES!!!"
end

IO.puts Person.can_drink(age)
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You're right, but I thought that would've make more sense, more readable, and a little bit less confusing for people coming from other languages, the way I did it.

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begedin profile image
Nikola Begedin

While pattern matching / function clause overloading is great, and one of the many advantages elixir offers, AFAIK, it's not a trait exclusive to functional languages.

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elixirprogrammer profile image
Anthony Gonzalez

That's correct!

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elixirprogrammer profile image
Anthony Gonzalez

You're absolutely right, but with functional programming, it's not as easy, you need a completely different mindset and the principles force you to not be so careless or not so procedural.