问题
I'm trying to figure out the correct syntax to use the pipe operator |> into the creation of an object. Currently I'm using a static member to create the object and just piping to that. Here is the simplified version.
type Shape =
val points : Vector[]
new (points) =
{ points = points; }
static member create(points) =
Shape(points)
static member concat(shapes : Shape list) =
shapes
|> List.map (fun shape -> shape.points)
|> Array.concat
|> Shape.create
What I want to do ...
static member concat(shapes : Shape list) =
shapes
|> List.map (fun shape -> shape.points)
|> Array.concat
|> (new Shape)
Is something like this possible? I don't want to duplicate code by repeating my constructor with the static member create.
Update Constructors are first-class functions as of F# 4.0
In F# 4.0 the correct syntax is.
static member concat(shapes : Shape list) =
shapes
|> List.map (fun shape -> shape.points)
|> Array.concat
|> Shape
回答1:
There's always
(fun args -> new Shape(args))
回答2:
Apparently, object constructors aren't composable. Discriminated union constructors don't seem to have this problem:
> 1 + 1 |> Some;;
val it : int option = Some 2
If you want to use the pipeline, Brian's answer is probably best. In this case, I'd consider just wrapping the entire expression with Shape( ).
来源:https://stackoverflow.com/questions/531178/using-the-f-pipe-symbol-with-an-object-constructor