One difference between functional programming and "regular" programming is the use of mutable state. In traditional programming, objects or programs hold state, and that state can change over time. In functional programming, objects are immutable and do not change their state over time.
One traditional beginner's exercise for object-oriented programming is to simulate an automated teller machine (ATM). It is often used because it maps an object of the physical world onto an object in the program world, and the operations are nontrivial yet well-understood.
It also defines an object (the ATM) which exists over time and has different states. As people deposit and withdraw money, the state of the ATM changes. (With enough withdrawals the state becomes "out of cash" and therefore "out of service".)
The ATM model is also a good example of how we in the programming industry have been focussed on changing state. For more than half a century, our computational models have used state -- mutable state -- often to the detriment of maintenance and clarity.
Our fixation on mutable state is clear to those who use functional programming languages. In those languages, state is not mutable. Programs may have objects, but objects are fixed and unchanging. Once created, an object may contain state but cannot change. (If you want an object to contain a different state, then you must create a new object with that different state.)
Programmers in the traditional languages of Java and C# got an exposure to this notion with the immutable strings in those languages. A string in Java is immutable; you cannot change its contents. If you want a string with a different content, such as all lower-case letters, you have to create a new object.
Programming languages such as Haskell and Erlang make that notion the norm. Every object is immutable, every object may contain state but cannot be changed.
Why has it taken us more than fifty years to arrive at this, um, well, state?
I have a few ideas. As usual with my explanations, we have to understand our history.
One reason has to do with efficiency. The other reason has to do with mindset.
Reason one: Objects with mutable state were more efficient.
Early computers were less powerful than those of today. With today's computers, we can devote some percentage of processing to memory management and garbage collection. We can afford the automatic memory management. Earlier computers were less powerful, and creating and destroying objects were operations that took significant amounts of time. It was more efficient to re-use the same object and simply change its state rather than create a new object with the new state, point to that new object, and destroy the old object and return its memory to the free pool.
Reason two: Objects with mutable state match the physical world
Objects in the real world hold physical state. Whether it is an ATM or an automobile or an employee's file, the physical version of the object is one that changes over time. Books at a library, in the past, contained a special pocket glued to the back cover used to hold a card which indicated the borrower and the date due back at the library. That card held different state over time; each lending would be recorded -- until the card was filled.
The physical world has few immutable objects. (Technically all objects are mutable, as they wear and fade over time. But I'm not talking about those kinds of changes.) Most objects, especially objects for computation, change and hold state. Cash registers, ATMs, dresser draws that hold t-shirts, cameras (with film that could be exposed or unexposed), ... just about everything holds state. (Some things do not change, such as bricks and stones used for houses and walkpaths, but those are not used for computation.)
We humans have been computing for thousands of years, and we've been doing it with mutable objects for all of that time. From tally sticks with marks cut by a knife to mechanical adding machines, we've used objects with changing states. It's only in the past half-century that it has been possible to compute with immutable objects.
That's about one percent of the time, which considering everything we're doing, isn't bad. We humans advance our calculation methods slowly. (Consider how long it took to change from Roman numerals to Arabic, and how long it took to accept zero as a number.)
I think the lesson of functional programming (with its immutable objects) is this: We are still in the early days of human computing. We are still figuring out how to calculate, and how to represent those calculations for others to understand. We should not assume that we are "finished" and that programming is "done". We have a long journey ahead of us, one that will bring more changes. We learn as we travel on this journey, and they end -- or even the intermediate points -- is not clear. It is an adventure.
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