No self-respecting language today can get by without functions—first class little bundles of code. Since Wren is object-oriented, most of your code will live in methods on classes, but free-floating functions are still eminently handy.
Functions are objects like everything else in Wren, instances of the `Fn` class.
## Creating functions
Most of the time you create a function just to pass it to some method. For example, if you want to filter a [list](lists.html) by some criteria, you'll call its `where` method, passing in a function that defines the predicate you're filtering on.
Since that's the most common usage pattern, Wren's syntax optimizes for that. Taking a page from Ruby, a function is created by passing a *block argument* to a method. At its simplest, it looks like this:
Here we're invoking the `callMe` method on `blondie`. We're passing one argument, a function whose body is everything between that pair of curly braces.
A method can take other arguments in addition to the block. They appear before the block just like a regular argument list. For example:
:::dart
blondie.callMeAt(867, 5309) {
IO.print("This is the body!")
}
Of course, you don't *have* to use a block argument to pass a function to a method. If you already have a function object, you can pass it like a regular argument:
:::dart
var someFn = // Get a function...
blondie.callMe(someFn)
Block arguments are purely sugar for creating a function and passing it in one little blob of syntax. There are some times when you want to create a function but *don't* need to pass it to a method. For that, you can call the `Fn` class's constructor:
Functions expose a `call` method that executes the body of the function. This method is dynamically-dispatched like any other, so you can define your own "function-like" classes and pass them to methods that expect "real" functions.
Of course, functions aren't very useful if you can't pass values to them. The functions that we've seen so far take no arguments. To change that, you can provide a parameter list surrounded by `|` immediately after the opening brace of the body, like so:
The body of a function is a [block](syntax.html#blocks). If it is a single expression—more precisely if there is no newline after the `{` or parameter list—then the function implicitly returns the value of the expression.
Otherwise, the body returns `null` by default. You can explicitly return a value using a `return` statement. In other words, these two functions do the same thing:
As you expect, functions are closures—they can access variables defined outside of their scope. They will hold onto closed-over variables even after leaving the scope where the function is defined:
Here, the `create` method returns the function created on its second line. That function references a variable `i` declared outside of the function. Even after the function is returned from `create`, it is still able to read and assign to`i`: