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Ramda vs Lodash
var _ = require("lodash");
var R = require("ramda");
var companies = [
{ name: "tw", since: 1993 },
{ name: "pucrs", since: 1930 },
{ name: "tw br", since: 2009 }
];
var r1 = _(companies).chain()
.filter(function(c) {
return c.name.split(" ")[0] === "tw";
})
.map(function(c) {
return {
name: c.name.toUpperCase(),
since: c.since
};
})
.sortBy(function(c) {
return c.since;
})
.reverse()
.value();
console.log("with lodash:", r1);
var r2 = R.compose(
R.reverse,
R.sortBy(R.prop("since")),
R.map(R.over(R.lensProp("name"), R.toUpper)),
R.filter(R.where({ name: R.test(/^tw/) }))
)(companies);
console.log("with ramda:", r2);
@andrewshatnyy
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This all seems cool but in the end what is the performance difference. I mean when you end up working on the project where half of devs love Ramda and the other half worship Lodash the only reasonable argument is performance.

I heard that Lodash team has done some insane tricks to optimize the performance including using while loops instead of native to make iterators fast.
Has anyone done comprehensive benchmarking?

@Vbianshuman
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Vbianshuman commented Feb 1, 2017

Ramda seems to be better in terms of speed:

https://jsperf.com/ramda-vs-lodash
https://jsperf.com/ramda-vs-lodash/3

However, both are extremely sluggish as compared to native imperative code. Hopefully that will change in the future

@a-x-
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a-x- commented Feb 28, 2017

lodash.fp and more es6

var r5 = _.flow(
  _.filter(o => o.name.startsWith('tw')),
  _.map(o => ({ ...o, name: o.name.toUpperCase() })),
  _.sortByOrder('since', 'desc')
)(companies);

@tylerlong
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tylerlong commented Jun 27, 2017

A shorter Ramda version:

var r3 = R.pipe(
  R.filter(R.pipe(R.prop('name'), R.startsWith('tw'))),
  R.map(R.over(R.lensProp('name'), R.toUpper)),
  R.sort(R.descend(R.prop('since'))),
)(companies)

@qiansen1386

With Ramda compose, we seem have to reverse the order? Does it make the function group even harder to read?

You can use Ramda pipe instead of compose.

@MichelML
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Thanks for the battle this is pretty interesting (and entertaining haha!)

@hyperscientist
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hyperscientist commented Aug 30, 2017

And if we strip @a-x- version of unnecessary underscores… ;-)

var r5 = companies
  .filter(c => c.name.startsWith("tw"))
  .map(c => ({ ...c, name: c.name.toUpperCase() }))
  .sort((a, b) => b.since - a.since);

Someone would have to try extra hard to convince me that 9 function invocations of 9 different Ramda methods (all of which you along with all present and future team members have to have memorised) is better in any aspect…

@hillerstorm
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@kamiltrebunia what if companies or c.name is null or undefined? ;) lodash and ramda handles that for you

@jaunkst
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jaunkst commented Oct 3, 2017

@hillerstorm yep, and the first function can easily be a filter or reducer to eliminate invalid entities

@omeid
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omeid commented Feb 18, 2018

@hillerstorm: Got you covered!

var r5 = (companies || [])
  .filter(c => c.name && c.name.startsWith("tw"))
  .map(c => ({ ...c, name: c.name.toUpperCase() }))
  .sort((a, b) => b.since - a.since);

@marano
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marano commented Oct 11, 2018

Even though Ramda is definitely more powerful, and I do prefer Ramda over lodash, I've found that for a lot of common operations lodash is simpler to use. It handles many real world cases that Ramda doesn't. For instance, when you iterate object properties with lodash it will skip "hidden" properties (that start with _) by default. It also performs much better on some operations, of course it doesn't really matter most of the time.

@hnordt
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hnordt commented Apr 28, 2019

An even shorter Ramda version:

const r3 = R.pipe(
  R.filter(R.where({ name: R.startsWith('tw') })),
  R.map(R.evolve({ name: R.toUpper })),
  R.sort(R.descend(R.prop('since')))
)

r3(companies)

@enoh-barbu
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enoh-barbu commented Dec 16, 2019

in the lodash example you said c.name.split(" ")[0] === "tw" but in the ramda's one you've put a regex R.test(/^tw/) . Really?
The same regex could be also applied in the first case, natively /^tw/.test(name) which is actually shorter.

@vvgomes
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Author

vvgomes commented Dec 16, 2019

But that would not be point-free. The point is not being shorter. The point is being point-free, auto-curried, composable.

Thanks for adding to the discussion :)

@enoh-barbu
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Oh, I wasn't aware of this comparison.

@qjnz
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qjnz commented Jan 12, 2021

how about from performance perspective? anyone has done it?

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