I like my code to have a "top-down" structure, and that means I want to do exactly the opposite from what is natural in Clojure: functions being defined before they are used. This shouldn't be a problem, though, because I could theoretically declare
all my functions first, and just go on and enjoy life. But it seems in practice declare
cannot solve every single problem, and I would like to understand what is exactly the reason the following code does not work.
I have two functions, and I want to define a third by composing the two. The following three pieces of code accomplish this:
1
(defn f [x] (* x 3))
(defn g [x] (+ x 5))
(defn mycomp [x] (f (g x)))
(println (mycomp 10))
2
(defn f [x] (* x 3))
(defn g [x] (+ x 5))
(def mycomp (comp f g))
3
(declare f g)
(defn mycomp [x] (f (g x)))
(defn f [x] (* x 3))
(defn g [x] (+ x 5))
But what I would really like to write is
(declare f g)
(def mycomp (comp f g))
(defn f [x] (* x 3))
(defn g [x] (+ x 5))
And that gives me
Exception in thread "main" java.lang.IllegalStateException: Attempting to call unbound fn: #'user/g,
That would mean forward declaring works for many situations, but there are still some cases I can't just declare
all my functions and write the code in any way and in whatever order I like. What is the reason for this error? What does forward declaring really allows me to do, and what are the situations I must have the function already defined, such as for using comp
in this case? How can I tell when the definition is strictly necessary?