BatteriesExceptionless.LazyList
include module type of Batteries.LazyList with module Labels := Batteries.LazyList.Labels
Empty_list
is raised when an operation applied on an empty list is invalid. For instance, hd nil
will raise Empty_list
.
Invalid_index
is raised when an indexed access on a list is out of list bounds.
Different_list_size
is raised when applying functions such as iter2
on two lists having different size.
Note The types are kept concrete so as to allow pattern-matching. However, it is generally easier to manipulate nil
and cons
.
and 'a node_t = 'a BatLazyList.node_t =
| Nil | |
| Cons of 'a * 'a t | (* The type of an item in the list. *) |
include BatEnum.Enumerable with type 'a enumerable = 'a t
type 'a enumerable = 'a t
The data structure, e.g. 'a List.t
include BatInterfaces.Mappable with type 'a mappable = 'a t
type 'a mappable = 'a t
The data structure, e.g. 'a List.t
val nil : 'a t
The empty list.
val peek : 'a t -> 'a option
peek l
returns the first element of l
, if it exists.
val from : (unit -> 'a) -> 'a t
from next
creates a (possibly infinite) lazy list from the successive results of next
.
val from_while : (unit -> 'a option) -> 'a t
from next
creates a (possibly infinite) lazy list from the successive results of next
. The list ends whenever next
returns None
.
val seq : 'a -> ('a -> 'a) -> ('a -> bool) -> 'a t
seq data next cond
creates a lazy list from the successive results of applying next
to data
, then to the result, etc. The list continues until the condition cond
fails. For example, seq 1 ((+) 1) ((>) 100)
returns [^1, 2, ... 99^]
. If cond init
is false, the result is empty. To create an infinite lazy list, pass (fun _ -> true)
as cond
.
val unfold : 'b -> ('b -> ('a * 'b) option) -> 'a t
unfold data next
creates a (possibly infinite) lazy list from the successive results of applying next
to data
, then to the result, etc. The list ends whenever next
returns None
. The function next
should return a pair option
whose first element will be the current value of the sequence; the second element will be passed (lazily) to next
in order to compute the following element. One example of a use of unfold
is to make each element of the resulting sequence to depend on the previous two elements, as in this Fibonacci sequence definition:
let data = (1, 1)
let next (x, y) = Some (x, (y, x + y))
let fib = unfold data next
The first element x
of the pair within Some
will be the current value of the sequence; the next value of the sequence, and the one after that, are recorded as y
and x + y
respectively.
val from_loop : 'b -> ('b -> 'a * 'b) -> 'a t
from_loop data next
creates a (possibly infinite) lazy list from the successive results of applying next
to data
, then to the result, etc. The list ends whenever the function raises LazyList.No_more_elements
. (For further information see unfold
; ignore references to option
and Some
.)
val init : int -> (int -> 'a) -> 'a t
Similar to Array.init
, init n f
returns the lazy list containing the results of (f 0),(f 1).... (f (n-1)).
val make : int -> 'a -> 'a t
Similar to String.make
, make n x
returns a list containing n
elements x
.
val range : int -> int -> int t
Compute lazily a range of integers a .. b as a lazy list.
The range is empty if b <= a.
val iter : ('a -> 'b) -> 'a t -> unit
Eager iteration
iter f [^ a0; a1; ...; an ^]
applies function f
in turn to a0;
a1; ...; an
. It is equivalent to begin f a0; f a1; ...; f an; ()
end
. In particular, it causes all the elements of the list to be evaluated.
val iteri : (int -> 'a -> unit) -> 'a t -> unit
Eager iteration, with indices
iteri f [^ a0; a1; ...; an ^]
applies function f
in turn to a0; a1;...; an
, along with the corresponding 0,1..n
index. It is equivalent to begin f 0 a0; f 1 a1; ...; f n an; ()
end
. In particular, it causes all the elements of the list to be evaluated.
Lazy map
map f [^ a0; a1; ... ^]
builds the list [^ f a0; f a1; ... ^]
with the results returned by f
. Not tail-recursive. Evaluations of f
take place only when the contents of the list are forced.
Lazy map, with indices
mapi f [^ a0; a1; ... ^]
builds the list [^ f 0 a0; f 1 a1;
... ^]
with the results returned by f
. Not tail-recursive. Evaluations of f
take place only when the contents of the list are forced.
val fold_left : ('a -> 'b -> 'a) -> 'a -> 'b t -> 'a
Eager fold_left
LazyList.fold_left f a [^ b0; b1; ...; bn ^]
is f (... (f (f
a b0) b1) ...) bn
. This causes evaluation of all the elements of the list.
val fold_right : ('a -> 'b -> 'b) -> 'b -> 'a t -> 'b
Eager fold_right
fold_right f b [^ a0; a1; ...; an ^]
is f a0 (f a1 (... (f an b) ...))
. This causes evaluation of all the elements of the list. Not tail-recursive.
Note that the argument order of this function is the same as fold_left
above, but inconsistent with other fold_right
functions in Batteries. We hope to fix this inconsistency in the next compatibility-breaking release, so you should rather use the more consistent eager_fold_right
.
val eager_fold_right : ('a -> 'b -> 'b) -> 'a t -> 'b -> 'b
Eager fold_right
As fold_right
above, but with the usual argument order for a fold_right.
Just as fold_left
on a structure 'a t
turns an element-level function of type ('b -> 'a -> 'b)
, with the accumulator argument 'b
on the left, into a structure-level function 'b -> 'a t -> 'b
, fold_right
turns a function ('a -> 'b -> 'b)
(accumulator on the right) into a 'a t -> 'b -> 'b
.
Lazy fold_right lazy_fold_right f (Cons (a0, Cons (a1, Cons (a2, nil)))) b
is lazy (f a0 (lazy (f a1 (lazy (f a2 b)))))
.
Forcing the result of lazy_fold_right
forces the first element of the list; the rest is forced only if/when the function f
forces its accumulator argument.
val mem : 'a -> 'a t -> bool
mem x l
determines if x
is part of l
. Evaluates all the elements of l
which appear before x
.
val memq : 'a -> 'a t -> bool
As mem
, but with physical equality
val find_exn : ('a -> bool) -> exn -> 'a t -> 'a
find_exn p e l
returns the first element of l
such as p x
returns true
or raises e
if such an element has not been found.
val rfind_exn : ('a -> bool) -> exn -> 'a t -> 'a
rfind_exn p e l
returns the last element of l
such as p x
returns true
or raises e
if such an element has not been found.
val index_of : 'a -> 'a t -> int option
index_of e l
returns the index of the first occurrence of e
in l
, or None
if there is no occurrence of e
in l
val index_ofq : 'a -> 'a t -> int option
index_ofq e l
behaves as index_of e l
except it uses physical equality
val rindex_of : 'a -> 'a t -> int option
index_of e l
returns the index of the last occurrence of e
in l
, or None
if there is no occurrence of e
in l
val rindex_ofq : 'a -> 'a t -> int option
rindex_ofq e l
behaves as rindex_of e l
except it uses physical equality
Compute and return the first node from the list as a Cons
. This differs from hd
, which returns the first element (the first component of the first node).
val length : 'a t -> int
Return the length (number of elements) of the given list.
Causes the evaluation of all the elements of the list.
val is_empty : 'a t -> bool
Returns true
if the list is empty, false otherwise.
val would_at_fail : 'a t -> int -> bool
would_at_fail l n
returns true
if l
contains strictly less than n
elements, false
otherwise
val hd : 'a t -> 'a
Return the first element of the given list.
val first : 'a t -> 'a
As hd
val last : 'a t -> 'a
Returns the last element of the list.
val nth : 'a t -> int -> 'a
Obsolete. As at
These lists behave essentially as HashMap
, although they are typically faster for short number of associations, and much slower for for large number of associations.
val mem_assoc : 'a -> ('a * 'b) t -> bool
As assoc
but simply returns true
if a binding exists, false
otherwise.
Evaluate a list and append another list after this one.
Cost is linear in the length of the first list, not tail-recursive.
Eager reverse-and-append
Cost is linear in the length of the first list, tail-recursive.
Lazy append
Cost is constant. All evaluation is delayed until the contents of the list are actually read. Reading itself is delayed by a constant.
unique cmp l
returns the list l
without any duplicate element. Default comparator ( = ) is used if no comparison function specified.
as unique
except only uses an equality function. Use for short lists when comparing is expensive compared to equality testing
remove l x
returns the list l
without the first element x
found or returns l
if no element is equal to x
. Elements are compared using ( = ).
remove_if cmp l
is similar to remove
, but with cmp
used instead of ( = ).
remove_all l x
is similar to remove
but removes all elements that are equal to x
and not only the first one.
remove_all_such f l
is similar to remove
but removes all elements that satisfy the predicate f
and not only the first one.
take n l
returns up to the n
first elements from list l
, if available.
drop n l
returns l
without the first n
elements, or the empty list if l
have less than n
elements.
take_while f xs
returns the first elements of list xs
which satisfy the predicate f
.
drop_while f xs
returns the list xs
with the first elements satisfying the predicate f
dropped.
val to_list : 'a t -> 'a list
Eager conversion to string.
val to_array : 'a t -> 'a array
Eager conversion to array.
val of_list : 'a list -> 'a t
Lazy conversion from lists
Albeit slower than eager conversion, this is the default mechanism for converting from regular lists to lazy lists. This for two reasons : * if you're using lazy lists, total speed probably isn't as much an issue as start-up speed * this will let you convert regular infinite lists to lazy lists.
val eager_of_list : 'a list -> 'a t
Eager conversion from lists.
This function is much faster than of_list
but will freeze on cyclic lists.
val of_array : 'a array -> 'a t
Eager conversion from array
Lazy filtering.
filter p l
returns all the elements of the list l
that satisfy the predicate p
. The order of the elements in the input list is preserved.
val exists : ('a -> bool) -> 'a t -> bool
Eager existential.
exists p [^ a0; a1; ... ^]
checks if at least one element of the list satisfies the predicate p
. That is, it returns (p a0) || (p a1) || ...
.
val for_all : ('a -> bool) -> 'a t -> bool
Eager universal.
for_all p [^ a0; a1; ... ^]
checks if all elements of the list satisfy the predicate p
. That is, it returns (p a0) && (p a1) && ...
.
Lazily eliminate some elements and transform others.
filter_map f [^ a0; a1; ... ^]
applies lazily f
to each a0
, a1
... If f ai
evaluates to None
, the element is not included in the result. Otherwise, if f ai
evaluates to Some x
, element x
is included in the result.
This is equivalent to match f a0 with
| Some x0 -> x0 ^:^ (match f a1 with
| Some x1 -> x1 ^:^ ...
| None -> [^ ^])
| None -> [^ ^]
.
val eternity : unit t
An infinite list of nothing
Sort the list using optional comparator (by default compare
).
map2 f [^ a0; a1; ...^] [^ b0; b1; ... ^]
is [^ f a0 b0; f a1
b1; ... ^]
.
iter2 f [^ a0; ...; an ^] [^ b0; ...; bn ^]
calls in turn f a0 b0; ...; f an bn
. Tail-recursive, eager.
fold_left2 f a [^ b0; b1; ...; bn ^] [^ c0; c1; ...; cn ^]
is f (... (f (f a b0 c0) b1 c1) ...) bn cn
. Eager.
fold_right2 f [^ a0; a1; ...; an ^] [^ b0; b1; ...; bn ^] c
is f a0 b0 (f a1 b1 (... (f an bn c) ...))
. Eager.
Same as for_all
, but for a two-argument predicate.
equal eq s1 s2
compares elements of s1
and s2
pairwise using eq
and returns true if all elements pass the test and the lists have the same length; otherwise it returns false. Examples:
equal (=) (range 0 4) (range 0 4) (* true *)
(* Make lazy lists of lazy lists: *)
let s1 = init 5 (range 0)
let s2 = init 5 (range 0)
equal (equal (=)) s1 s2 (* true *)
(Calling =
directly on a pair of lazy lists may succeed but is not guaranteed to behave consistently.)
Note that on lists of equal length, equal
and for_all2
can perform the same function; their intended uses differ, however, as signaled by behavior on lists of different lengths.
Same as exists
, but for a two-argument predicate.
Transform a pair of lists into a list of pairs: combine [^ a0; a1; ... ^] [^ b0; b1; ... ^]
is [^ (a0, b0); (a1, b1); ... ^]
.
module Infix = BatLazyList.Infix
val print : ?first:string -> ?last:string -> ?sep:string ->
('a BatInnerIO.output -> 'b -> unit) -> 'a BatInnerIO.output -> 'b t -> unit
The following modules replace functions defined in LazyList
with functions behaving slightly differently but having the same name. This is by design: the functions meant to override the corresponding functions of LazyList
.
module Exceptionless = BatLazyList.Exceptionless
Exceptionless counterparts for error-raising operations
include module type of struct include BatLazyList.Exceptionless end
Exceptionless counterparts for error-raising operations
val find : ('a -> bool) -> 'a BatLazyList.t -> 'a option
find p l
returns Some x
where x
is the first element of l
such that p x
returns true
or None
if such element as not been found.
val rfind : ('a -> bool) -> 'a BatLazyList.t -> 'a option
rfind p l
returns Some x
where x
is the last element of l
such that p x
returns true
or None
if such element as not been found.
val findi : (int -> 'a -> bool) -> 'a BatLazyList.t -> (int * 'a) option
findi p e l
returns Some (i, ai)
where ai
and i
are respectively the first element of l
and its index, such that p i ai
is true, or None
if no such element has been found.
val rfindi : (int -> 'a -> bool) -> 'a BatLazyList.t -> (int * 'a) option
rfindi p e l
returns Some (i, ai)
where ai
and i
are respectively the last element of l
and its index, such that p i ai
is true, or None
if no such element has been found.
val split_at : int -> 'a BatLazyList.t -> [ `Ok of 'a BatLazyList.t * 'a BatLazyList.t | `Invalid_index of int ]
Whenever n
is inside of l
size bounds, split_at n l
returns `Ok (l1,l2)
, where l1
contains the first n
elements of l
and l2
contains the others. Otherwise, returns `Invalid_index n
val at : 'a BatLazyList.t -> int -> [ `Ok of 'a | `Invalid_index of int ]
If n
is inside the bounds of l
, at l n
returns `Ok x
, where x
is the n-th element of the list l
. Otherwise, returns `Invalid_index n
.
val assoc : 'a -> ('a * 'b) BatLazyList.t -> 'b option
assoc a l
returns Some b
where b
is the value associated with key a
in the list of pairs l
. That is, assoc a [ ...; (a,b); ...] = Some b
if (a,b)
is the leftmost binding of a
in list l
. Return None
if there is no value associated with a
in the list l
.
val assq : 'a -> ('a * 'b) BatLazyList.t -> 'b option
As assoc
but with physical equality
module Labels : sig ... end