// Fractal object #1
const part1 = { arrayKey: [1], objectKey: { a: 'a', b: 'b' } };
// Fractal object #2
const part2 = { arrayKey: [2, 3], objectKey: { c: 'c' } };
// Fractal object #3
const part3 = { arrayKey: [4] }
// View the result of the multiplication of the fractal objects #1, #2, and #3
console.log(fold([part1, part2, part3]));
// The output is a new fractal object:
// { arrayKey: [ 1, 2, 3, 4 ], objectKey: { a: 'a', b: 'b', c: 'c' } }
A fractal object is an object that has self-similarity at lower scales. Multiplication of two fractal objects results in a new fractal object that has the same shape as the original ones.
If we multiply fractal objects in a list pairwise, we'll receive a new fractal object, which will represent all the fractal objects in the list and which will also have the same shape.
By default, the multiplication function provided by the fractal-objects
package multiplies two objects by concatenating their array values, merging object values, and replacing scalars with
values from the second multiplied object.
Any other multiplication function can be used if it has the following properties:
- It keeps the object shape: The multiplicands and the result must have the same shape and type.
- It's associative. For example, multiplying
(a b) c
must have the same result as multiplyinga (b c)
. - It must yield the result
a
when multiplyingundefined a
ora undefined
.
In terms of mathematics, fractal objects are a [semigroup].
Fractal Objects currently have implementations for these programming languages:
Copyright © 2018 SysGears (Cyprus) Limited. This source code is licensed under the MIT license.