Hey guys,

I don't know about you but when I was a beginner in Clojure (and it still 
happens every now and then) I had a hard time finding functions using `doc` 
or `find-doc`,
normally because I didn't remember the name of the function or because my 
only clue was a generic name so find-doc would return too much results. But 
one
thing I knew: what to expect of the function, I knew the inputs and the 
outputs. That's why I decided to create wally, because sometimes you don't
know the name of the function you want but you know how it should behave.

With wally you can tell the inputs and the output and it'll search for 
functions that match those inputs/outputs.

Ex:

user=> (find-by-sample {1 1, 2 3, 3 1, 4 2} [1 2 3 4 4 2 
2])-------------------------clojure.core/frequencies([coll])
>   Returns a map from distinct items in coll to the number of times
>   they appear.
>
>
user=> (find-by-sample '((1 2 3) (4 5)) (partial < 3) [1 2 3 4 5])
> -------------------------
> clojure.core/partition-by
> ([f coll])
>   Applies f to each value in coll, splitting it each time f returns
>    a new value.  Returns a lazy seq of partitions.
>

 https://github.com/stackoverflow/wally

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