diff options
| -rw-r--r-- | haskell.html.markdown | 15 | ||||
| -rw-r--r-- | perl6.html.markdown | 2 | 
2 files changed, 9 insertions, 8 deletions
| diff --git a/haskell.html.markdown b/haskell.html.markdown index 2f807c5f..f28fcfe7 100644 --- a/haskell.html.markdown +++ b/haskell.html.markdown @@ -202,19 +202,20 @@ foo = (*5) . (+10)  foo 5 -- 75  -- fixing precedence --- Haskell has another function called `$`. This changes the precedence --- so that everything to the left of it gets computed first and then applied --- to everything on the right. You can use `$` (often in combination with `.`) --- to get rid of a lot of parentheses: +-- Haskell has another operator called `$`. This operator applies a function  +-- to a given parameter. In contrast to standard function application, which  +-- has highest possible priority of 10 and is left-associative, the `$` operator  +-- has priority of 0 and is right-associative. Such a low priority means that +-- the expression on its right is applied as the parameter to the function on its left.  -- before -(even (fib 7)) -- true +(even (fib 7)) -- false  -- after -even . fib $ 7 -- true +even . fib $ 7 -- false  -- equivalently -even $ fib 7 -- true +even $ fib 7 -- false  ----------------------------------------------------  -- 5. Type signatures diff --git a/perl6.html.markdown b/perl6.html.markdown index 1b320028..f0ef6600 100644 --- a/perl6.html.markdown +++ b/perl6.html.markdown @@ -560,7 +560,7 @@ subset VeryBigInteger of Int where * > 500;  multi sub sayit(Int $n) { # note the `multi` keyword here    say "Number: $n";  } -multi sayit(Str $s) } # a multi is a `sub` by default +multi sayit(Str $s) { # a multi is a `sub` by default    say "String: $s";  }  sayit("foo"); # prints "String: foo" | 
