Question

Given the following:

open System.Linq

let seqA = { 1..10 }

this works:

seqA.All (fun n -> n > 0)

However this doesn't:

let abc = fun n -> n > 0

seqA.All (abc)

Why does F# offer implicit conversion from lambda expressions to Funcs but not from functions? Pointers to the documentation where I can read up on what's going on here are welcome. :-)

Was it helpful?

Solution

This is covered in the (rather involved) section of the spec on Method Resolution and again in Type-directed Conversions at Member Invocations. Quoting from the latter:

As described in Method Application Resolution (see §14.4), two type-directed conversions are applied at method invocations.

The first type-directed conversion converts anonymous function expressions and other function-valued arguments to delegate types. Given:

  • A formal parameter of delegate type D
  • An actual argument farg of known type ty1 -> ... -> tyn -> rty
  • Precisely n arguments to the Invoke method of delegate type D

Then:

  • The parameter is interpreted as if it were written:
    new D(fun arg1 ... argn -> farg arg1 ... argn)

It seems to suggest this conversion would be applied to any function value, but observation suggests it's applied only to anonymous functions.

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