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Module std.algorithm.iteration
This is a submodule of std
.
It contains generic iteration algorithms.
Function Name | Description |
---|---|
cache | Eagerly evaluates and caches another range's front . |
cacheBidirectional | As above, but also provides back and popBack . |
chunkBy | chunkBy!((a,b) => a[1] == b[1])([[1, 1], [1, 2], [2, 2], [2, 1]])
returns a range containing 3 subranges: the first with just
[1, 1] ; the second with the elements [1, 2] and [2, 2] ;
and the third with just [2, 1] . |
cumulativeFold | cumulativeFold!((a, b) => a + b)([1, 2, 3, 4]) returns a
lazily-evaluated range containing the successive reduced values 1 ,
3 , 6 , 10 . |
each | each!writeln([1, 2, 3]) eagerly prints the numbers 1 , 2
and 3 on their own lines. |
filter | filter!(a => a > 0)([1, -1, 2, 0, -3]) iterates over elements 1
and 2 . |
filterBidirectional | Similar to filter , but also provides back and popBack at
a small increase in cost. |
fold | fold!((a, b) => a + b)([1, 2, 3, 4]) returns 10 . |
group | group([5, 2, 2, 3, 3]) returns a range containing the tuples
tuple(5, 1) , tuple(2, 2) , and tuple(3, 2) . |
joiner | joiner(["hello", "world!"], "; ") returns a range that iterates
over the characters "hello; world!" . No new string is created -
the existing inputs are iterated. |
map | map!(a => a * 2)([1, 2, 3]) lazily returns a range with the numbers
2 , 4 , 6 . |
mean | Colloquially known as the average, mean([1, 2, 3]) returns 2 . |
permutations | Lazily computes all permutations using Heap's algorithm. |
reduce | reduce!((a, b) => a + b)([1, 2, 3, 4]) returns 10 .
This is the old implementation of fold . |
splitWhen | Lazily splits a range by comparing adjacent elements. |
splitter | Lazily splits a range by a separator. |
substitute | [1, 2] returns [0.1, 2] . |
sum | Same as fold , but specialized for accurate summation. |
uniq | Iterates over the unique elements in a range, which is assumed sorted. |
Functions
Name | Description |
---|---|
cache(range)
|
cache eagerly evaluates front of range
on each construction or call to popFront,
to store the result in a cache.
The result is then directly returned when front is called,
rather than re-evaluated.
|
cacheBidirectional(range)
|
cache eagerly evaluates front of range
on each construction or call to popFront,
to store the result in a cache.
The result is then directly returned when front is called,
rather than re-evaluated.
|
chunkBy(r)
|
Chunks an input range into subranges of equivalent adjacent elements.
In other languages this is often called partitionBy , groupBy
or sliceWhen .
|
group(r)
|
Groups consecutively equivalent elements into a single tuple of the element and the number of its repetitions. |
joiner(r, sep)
|
Lazily joins a range of ranges with a separator. The separator itself
is a range. If a separator is not provided, then the ranges are
joined directly without anything in between them (often called flatten
in other languages).
|
mean(r)
|
Finds the mean (colloquially known as the average) of a range. |
permutations(r)
|
Lazily computes all permutations of r using Heap's algorithm.
|
splitter(r, s)
|
Lazily splits a range using an element or range as a separator. Separator ranges can be any narrow string type or sliceable range type. |
splitter(s)
|
Lazily splits the character-based range s into words, using whitespace as the
delimiter.
|
splitWhen(r)
|
Splits a forward range into subranges in places determined by a binary predicate. |
substitute(r, substs)
|
Returns a range with all occurrences of substs in r .
replaced with their substitution.
|
sum(r)
|
Sums elements of r , which must be a finite
input range. Although
conceptually sum(r) is equivalent to fold !((a, b) => a +
b)(r, 0), sum uses specialized algorithms to maximize accuracy,
as follows.
|
uniq(r)
|
Lazily iterates unique consecutive elements of the given range, which is
assumed to be sorted (functionality akin to the
uniq system
utility). Equivalence of elements is assessed by using the predicate
pred , by default "a == b" . The predicate is passed to
binaryFun , and can either accept a string, or any callable
that can be executed via pred(element, element) . If the given range is
bidirectional, uniq also yields a
bidirectional range.
|
Structs
Name | Description |
---|---|
Group
|
Groups consecutively equivalent elements into a single tuple of the element and the number of its repetitions. |
Permutations
|
Lazily computes all permutations of r using Heap's algorithm.
|
Templates
Name | Description |
---|---|
cumulativeFold
|
Similar to fold , but returns a range containing the successive reduced values.
The call cumulativeFold!(fun)(range, seed) first assigns seed to an
internal variable result , also called the accumulator.
The returned range contains the values result = fun(result, x) lazily
evaluated for each element x in range . Finally, the last element has the
same value as fold!(fun)(seed, range) .
The one-argument version cumulativeFold!(fun)(range) works similarly, but
it returns the first element unchanged and uses it as seed for the next
elements.
This function is also known as
partial_sum,
accumulate,
scan,
Cumulative Sum.
|
each
|
Eagerly iterates over r and calls fun with each element.
|
filter
|
filter!(predicate)(range) returns a new range containing only elements x in range for
which predicate(x) returns true .
|
filterBidirectional
|
Similar to filter , except it defines a
bidirectional range.
There is a speed disadvantage - the constructor spends time
finding the last element in the range that satisfies the filtering
condition (in addition to finding the first one). The advantage is
that the filtered range can be spanned from both directions. Also,
std can be applied against the filtered range.
|
fold
|
Implements the homonym function (also known as accumulate , compress , inject , or foldl ) present in various programming
languages of functional flavor. The call fold!(fun)(range, seed)
first assigns seed to an internal variable result ,
also called the accumulator. Then, for each element x in range , result = fun(result, x) gets evaluated. Finally, result is returned. The one-argument version fold!(fun)(range)
works similarly, but it uses the first element of the range as the
seed (the range must be non-empty).
|
map
|
Implements the homonym function (also known as transform ) present
in many languages of functional flavor. The call map!(fun)(range)
returns a range of which elements are obtained by applying fun(a)
left to right for all elements a in range . The original ranges are
not changed. Evaluation is done lazily.
|
reduce
|
Implements the homonym function (also known as accumulate , compress , inject , or foldl ) present in various programming
languages of functional flavor. There is also fold which does
the same thing but with the opposite parameter order.
The call reduce!(fun)(seed, range) first assigns seed to
an internal variable result , also called the accumulator.
Then, for each element x in range , result = fun(result, x)
gets evaluated. Finally, result is returned.
The one-argument version reduce!(fun)(range)
works similarly, but it uses the first element of the range as the
seed (the range must be non-empty).
|
substitute
|
Returns a range with all occurrences of substs in r .
replaced with their substitution.
|
Authors
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