package core
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doc/core/Core/Sequence/index.html
Module Core.Sequence
Source
This module extends Base.Sequence
with bin_io.
type 'a sequence := 'a Base.Sequence.t
include Base.Indexed_container.S1 with type 'a t := 'a Base.Sequence.t
include Base.Container.S1 with type 'a t := 'a Base.Sequence.t
Checks whether the provided element is there, using equal
.
fold t ~init ~f
returns f (... f (f (f init e1) e2) e3 ...) en
, where e1..en
are the elements of t
val fold_result :
'a Base.Sequence.t ->
init:'acc ->
f:('acc -> 'a -> ('acc, 'e) Base.Result.t) ->
('acc, 'e) Base.Result.t
fold_result t ~init ~f
is a short-circuiting version of fold
that runs in the Result
monad. If f
returns an Error _
, that value is returned without any additional invocations of f
.
val fold_until :
'a Base.Sequence.t ->
init:'acc ->
f:('acc -> 'a -> ('acc, 'final) Base.Container.Continue_or_stop.t) ->
finish:('acc -> 'final) ->
'final
fold_until t ~init ~f ~finish
is a short-circuiting version of fold
. If f
returns Stop _
the computation ceases and results in that value. If f
returns Continue _
, the fold will proceed. If f
never returns Stop _
, the final result is computed by finish
.
Example:
type maybe_negative =
| Found_negative of int
| All_nonnegative of { sum : int }
(** [first_neg_or_sum list] returns the first negative number in [list], if any,
otherwise returns the sum of the list. *)
let first_neg_or_sum =
List.fold_until ~init:0
~f:(fun sum x ->
if x < 0
then Stop (Found_negative x)
else Continue (sum + x))
~finish:(fun sum -> All_nonnegative { sum })
;;
let x = first_neg_or_sum [1; 2; 3; 4; 5]
val x : maybe_negative = All_nonnegative {sum = 15}
let y = first_neg_or_sum [1; 2; -3; 4; 5]
val y : maybe_negative = Found_negative -3
Returns true
if and only if there exists an element for which the provided function evaluates to true
. This is a short-circuiting operation.
Returns true
if and only if the provided function evaluates to true
for all elements. This is a short-circuiting operation.
Returns the number of elements for which the provided function evaluates to true.
Returns the sum of f i
for all i
in the container.
val sum :
(module Base.Container.Summable with type t = 'sum) ->
'a Base.Sequence.t ->
f:('a -> 'sum) ->
'sum
Returns as an option
the first element for which f
evaluates to true.
Returns the first evaluation of f
that returns Some
, and returns None
if there is no such element.
Returns a minimum (resp maximum) element from the collection using the provided compare
function, or None
if the collection is empty. In case of a tie, the first element encountered while traversing the collection is returned. The implementation uses fold
so it has the same complexity as fold
.
These are all like their equivalents in Container
except that an index starting at 0 is added as the first argument to f
.
include Base.Monad.S with type 'a t := 'a Base.Sequence.t
t >>= f
returns a computation that sequences the computations represented by two monad elements. The resulting computation first does t
to yield a value v
, and then runs the computation returned by f v
.
t >>| f
is t >>= (fun a -> return (f a))
.
bind t ~f
= t >>= f
return v
returns the (trivial) computation that returns v.
map t ~f
is t >>| f.
join t
is t >>= (fun t' -> t')
.
ignore_m t
is map t ~f:(fun _ -> ())
. ignore_m
used to be called ignore
, but we decided that was a bad name, because it shadowed the widely used Stdlib.ignore
. Some monads still do let ignore = ignore_m
for historical reasons.
Like all
, but ensures that every monadic value in the list produces a unit value, all of which are discarded rather than being collected into a list.
empty
is a sequence with no elements.
next
returns the next element of a sequence and the next tail if the sequence is not finished.
unfold_step ~init ~f
constructs a sequence by giving an initial state init
and a function f
explaining how to continue the next step from a given state.
unfold ~init f
is a simplified version of unfold_step
that does not allow Skip
.
val unfold_with :
'a Base.Sequence.t ->
init:'s ->
f:('s -> 'a -> ('b, 's) Base.Sequence.Step.t) ->
'b Base.Sequence.t
unfold_with t ~init ~f
folds a state through the sequence t
to create a new sequence
val unfold_with_and_finish :
'a Base.Sequence.t ->
init:'s_a ->
running_step:('s_a -> 'a -> ('b, 's_a) Base.Sequence.Step.t) ->
inner_finished:('s_a -> 's_b) ->
finishing_step:('s_b -> ('b, 's_b) Base.Sequence.Step.t) ->
'b Base.Sequence.t
unfold_with_and_finish t ~init ~running_step ~inner_finished ~finishing_step
folds a state through t
to create a new sequence (like unfold_with t ~init ~f:running_step
), and then continues the new sequence by unfolding the final state (like unfold_step ~init:(inner_finished final_state) ~f:finishing_step
).
Returns the nth element.
val folding_map :
'a Base.Sequence.t ->
init:'acc ->
f:('acc -> 'a -> 'acc * 'b) ->
'b Base.Sequence.t
folding_map
is a version of map
that threads an accumulator through calls to f
.
val folding_mapi :
'a Base.Sequence.t ->
init:'acc ->
f:(int -> 'acc -> 'a -> 'acc * 'b) ->
'b Base.Sequence.t
val merge_deduped_and_sorted :
'a Base.Sequence.t ->
'a Base.Sequence.t ->
compare:('a -> 'a -> int) ->
'a Base.Sequence.t
If t1
and t2
are each sorted without duplicates, merge_deduped_and_sorted t1 t2 ~compare
merges t1
and t2
into a sorted sequence without duplicates. Whenever identical elements are found in both t1
and t2
, the one from t1
is used and the one from t2
is discarded. The behavior is undefined if the inputs aren't sorted or contain duplicates.
val merge_sorted :
'a Base.Sequence.t ->
'a Base.Sequence.t ->
compare:('a -> 'a -> int) ->
'a Base.Sequence.t
If t1
and t2
are each sorted, merge_sorted t1 t2 ~compare
merges t1
and t2
into a sorted sequence. Whenever identical elements are found in both t1
and t2
, the one from t1
is used first. The behavior is undefined if the inputs aren't sorted.
val merge_with_duplicates :
'a Base.Sequence.t ->
'b Base.Sequence.t ->
compare:('a -> 'b -> int) ->
('a, 'b) Base.Sequence.Merge_with_duplicates_element.t Base.Sequence.t
merge_with_duplicates_element t1 t2 ~compare
is like merge
, except that for each element it indicates which input(s) the element comes from, using Merge_with_duplicates_element
.
tl t
and tl_eagerly_exn t
immediately evaluates the first element of t
and returns the unevaluated tail.
find_exn t ~f
returns the first element of t
that satisfies f
. It raises if there is no such element.
Like for_all
, but passes the index as an argument.
append t1 t2
first produces the elements of t1
, then produces the elements of t2
.
concat tt
produces the elements of each inner sequence sequentially. If any inner sequences are infinite, elements of subsequent inner sequences will not be reached.
concat_map t ~f
is concat (map t ~f)
.
val concat_mapi :
'a Base.Sequence.t ->
f:(int -> 'a -> 'b Base.Sequence.t) ->
'b Base.Sequence.t
concat_mapi t ~f
is like concat_map, but passes the index as an argument.
interleave tt
produces each element of the inner sequences of tt
eventually, even if any or all of the inner sequences are infinite. The elements of each inner sequence are produced in order with respect to that inner sequence. The manner of interleaving among the separate inner sequences is deterministic but unspecified.
round_robin list
is like interleave (of_list list)
, except that the manner of interleaving among the inner sequences is guaranteed to be round-robin. The input sequences may be of different lengths; an empty sequence is dropped from subsequent rounds of interleaving.
Transforms a pair of sequences into a sequence of pairs. The length of the returned sequence is the length of the shorter input. The remaining elements of the longer input are discarded.
WARNING: Unlike List.zip
, this will not error out if the two input sequences are of different lengths, because zip
may have already returned some elements by the time this becomes apparent.
val zip_full :
'a Base.Sequence.t ->
'b Base.Sequence.t ->
[ `Left of 'a | `Both of 'a * 'b | `Right of 'b ] Base.Sequence.t
zip_full
is like zip
, but if one sequence ends before the other, then it keeps producing elements from the other sequence until it has ended as well.
reduce_exn f [a1; ...; an]
is f (... (f (f a1 a2) a3) ...) an
. It fails on the empty sequence.
group l ~break
returns a sequence of lists (i.e., groups) whose concatenation is equal to the original sequence. Each group is broken where break
returns true on a pair of successive elements.
Example:
group ~break:(<>) (of_list ['M';'i';'s';'s';'i';'s';'s';'i';'p';'p';'i']) ->
of_list [['M'];['i'];['s';'s'];['i'];['s';'s'];['i'];['p';'p'];['i']]
val find_consecutive_duplicate :
'a Base.Sequence.t ->
equal:('a -> 'a -> bool) ->
('a * 'a) option
find_consecutive_duplicate t ~equal
returns the first pair of consecutive elements (a1, a2)
in t
such that equal a1 a2
. They are returned in the same order as they appear in t
.
val remove_consecutive_duplicates :
'a Base.Sequence.t ->
equal:('a -> 'a -> bool) ->
'a Base.Sequence.t
The same sequence with consecutive duplicates removed. The relative order of the other elements is unaffected.
val range :
?stride:int ->
?start:[ `inclusive | `exclusive ] ->
?stop:[ `inclusive | `exclusive ] ->
int ->
int ->
int Base.Sequence.t
range ?stride ?start ?stop start_i stop_i
is the sequence of integers from start_i
to stop_i
, stepping by stride
. If stride
< 0 then we need start_i
> stop_i
for the result to be nonempty (or start_i
>= stop_i
in the case where both bounds are inclusive).
init n ~f
is [(f 0); (f 1); ...; (f (n-1))]
. It is an error if n < 0
.
filter_map t ~f
produce mapped elements of t
which are not None
.
filter_mapi
is just like filter_map
, but it also passes in the index of each element to f
.
filter_opt t
produces the elements of t
which are not None
. filter_opt t
= filter_map t ~f:Fn.id
.
sub t ~pos ~len
is the len
-element subsequence of t
, starting at pos
. If the sequence is shorter than pos + len
, it returns t[pos] ... t[l-1]
, where l
is the length of the sequence.
take t n
produces the first n
elements of t
.
drop t n
produces all elements of t
except the first n
elements. If there are fewer than n
elements in t
, there is no error; the resulting sequence simply produces no elements. Usually you will probably want to use drop_eagerly
because it can be significantly cheaper.
drop_eagerly t n
immediately consumes the first n
elements of t
and returns the unevaluated tail of t
.
take_while t ~f
produces the longest prefix of t
for which f
applied to each element is true
.
drop_while t ~f
produces the suffix of t
beginning with the first element of t
for which f
is false
. Usually you will probably want to use drop_while_option
because it can be significantly cheaper.
val drop_while_option :
'a Base.Sequence.t ->
f:('a -> bool) ->
('a * 'a Base.Sequence.t) option
drop_while_option t ~f
immediately consumes the elements from t
until the predicate f
fails and returns the first element that failed along with the unevaluated tail of t
. The first element is returned separately because the alternatives would mean forcing the consumer to evaluate the first element again (if the previous state of the sequence is returned) or take on extra cost for each element (if the element is added to the final state of the sequence using shift_right
).
split_n t n
immediately consumes the first n
elements of t
and returns the consumed prefix, as a list, along with the unevaluated tail of t
.
chunks_exn t n
produces lists of elements of t
, up to n
elements at a time. The last list may contain fewer than n
elements. No list contains zero elements. If n
is not positive, it raises.
shift_right t a
produces a
and then produces each element of t
.
shift_right_with_list t l
produces the elements of l
, then produces the elements of t
. It is better to call shift_right_with_list
with a list of size n than shift_right
n times; the former will require O(1) work per element produced and the latter O(n) work per element produced.
shift_left t n
is a synonym for drop t n
.
Returns a sequence with all possible pairs. The stepper function of the second sequence passed as argument may be applied to the same state multiple times, so be careful using cartesian_product
with expensive or side-effecting functions. If the second sequence is infinite, some values in the first sequence may not be reached.
val interleaved_cartesian_product :
'a Base.Sequence.t ->
'b Base.Sequence.t ->
('a * 'b) Base.Sequence.t
Returns a sequence that eventually reaches every possible pair of elements of the inputs, even if either or both are infinite. The step function of both inputs may be applied to the same state repeatedly, so be careful using interleaved_cartesian_product
with expensive or side-effecting functions.
intersperse xs ~sep
produces sep
between adjacent elements of xs
, e.g., intersperse [1;2;3] ~sep:0 = [1;0;2;0;3]
.
cycle_list_exn xs
repeats the elements of xs
forever. If xs
is empty, it raises.
repeat a
repeats a
forever.
singleton a
produces a
exactly once.
val delayed_fold :
'a Base.Sequence.t ->
init:'s ->
f:('s -> 'a -> k:('s -> 'r) -> 'r) ->
finish:('s -> 'r) ->
'r
delayed_fold
allows to do an on-demand fold, while maintaining a state.
It is possible to exit early by not calling k
in f
. It is also possible to call k
multiple times. This results in the rest of the sequence being folded over multiple times, independently.
Note that delayed_fold
, when targeting JavaScript, can result in stack overflow as JavaScript doesn't generally have tail call optimization.
val fold_m :
bind:('acc_m -> f:('acc -> 'acc_m) -> 'acc_m) ->
return:('acc -> 'acc_m) ->
'elt Base.Sequence.t ->
init:'acc ->
f:('acc -> 'elt -> 'acc_m) ->
'acc_m
fold_m
is a monad-friendly version of fold
. Supply it with the monad's return
and bind
, and it will chain them through the computation.
val iter_m :
bind:('unit_m -> f:(unit -> 'unit_m) -> 'unit_m) ->
return:(unit -> 'unit_m) ->
'elt Base.Sequence.t ->
f:('elt -> 'unit_m) ->
'unit_m
iter_m
is a monad-friendly version of iter
. Supply it with the monad's return
and bind
, and it will chain them through the computation.
to_list_rev t
returns a list of the elements of t
, in reverse order. It is faster than to_list
.
of_lazy t_lazy
produces a sequence that forces t_lazy
the first time it needs to compute an element.
memoize t
produces each element of t
, but also memoizes them so that if you consume the same element multiple times it is only computed once. It's a non-eager version of force_eagerly
.
force_eagerly t
precomputes the sequence. It is behaviorally equivalent to of_list (to_list t)
, but may at some point have a more efficient implementation. It's an eager version of memoize
.
bounded_length ~at_most t
returns `Is len
if len = length t <= at_most
, and otherwise returns `Greater
. Walks through only as much of the sequence as necessary. Always returns `Greater
if at_most < 0
.
length_is_bounded_by ~min ~max t
returns true if min <= length t
and length t <= max
When min
or max
are not provided, the check for that bound is omitted. Walks through only as much of the sequence as necessary.
Generator
is a monadic interface to generate sequences in a direct style, similar to Python's generators.
Here are some examples:
open Generator
let rec traverse_list = function
| [] -> return ()
| x :: xs -> yield x >>= fun () -> traverse_list xs
let traverse_option = function
| None -> return ()
| Some x -> yield x
let traverse_array arr =
let n = Array.length arr in
let rec loop i =
if i >= n then return () else yield arr.(i) >>= fun () -> loop (i + 1)
in
loop 0
let rec traverse_bst = function
| Node.Empty -> return ()
| Node.Branch (left, value, right) ->
traverse_bst left >>= fun () ->
yield value >>= fun () ->
traverse_bst right
let sequence_of_list x = Generator.run (traverse_list x)
let sequence_of_option x = Generator.run (traverse_option x)
let sequence_of_array x = Generator.run (traverse_array x)
let sequence_of_bst x = Generator.run (traverse_bst x)
The functions in Expert
expose internal structure which is normally meant to be hidden. For example, at least when f
is purely functional, it is not intended for client code to distinguish between
Merges elements from sequences that are assumed to be sorted by compare
to produce a sequence also sorted by compare
. If any of the inputs are not sorted, the order of the output is not guaranteed to be sorted.
This includes duplicate elements in the output (whether they occur within one input sequence, or across different input sequences).