| var _curry1 = |
| /*#__PURE__*/ |
| require("./internal/_curry1"); |
| |
| var _toString = |
| /*#__PURE__*/ |
| require("./internal/_toString"); |
| /** |
| * Returns the string representation of the given value. `eval`'ing the output |
| * should result in a value equivalent to the input value. Many of the built-in |
| * `toString` methods do not satisfy this requirement. |
| * |
| * If the given value is an `[object Object]` with a `toString` method other |
| * than `Object.prototype.toString`, this method is invoked with no arguments |
| * to produce the return value. This means user-defined constructor functions |
| * can provide a suitable `toString` method. For example: |
| * |
| * function Point(x, y) { |
| * this.x = x; |
| * this.y = y; |
| * } |
| * |
| * Point.prototype.toString = function() { |
| * return 'new Point(' + this.x + ', ' + this.y + ')'; |
| * }; |
| * |
| * R.toString(new Point(1, 2)); //=> 'new Point(1, 2)' |
| * |
| * @func |
| * @memberOf R |
| * @since v0.14.0 |
| * @category String |
| * @sig * -> String |
| * @param {*} val |
| * @return {String} |
| * @example |
| * |
| * R.toString(42); //=> '42' |
| * R.toString('abc'); //=> '"abc"' |
| * R.toString([1, 2, 3]); //=> '[1, 2, 3]' |
| * R.toString({foo: 1, bar: 2, baz: 3}); //=> '{"bar": 2, "baz": 3, "foo": 1}' |
| * R.toString(new Date('2001-02-03T04:05:06Z')); //=> 'new Date("2001-02-03T04:05:06.000Z")' |
| */ |
| |
| |
| var toString = |
| /*#__PURE__*/ |
| _curry1(function toString(val) { |
| return _toString(val, []); |
| }); |
| |
| module.exports = toString; |