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travesty
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travesty.containers
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travesty.core_kernel_exts
Library
Module
Module type
Parameter
Class
Class type
Option extensions for Core_kernel
.
This just re-exports Travesty_base_exts.Option, but may contain Core_kernel
-specific extensions in future.
include module type of Travesty_base_exts.Option
Travesty instances
Options are traversable containers.
include Travesty.Traversable.S1 with type 'a t := 'a t
module On_monad
(M : Base.Monad.S) :
Travesty.Traversable.S1_on_monad with type 'a t := 'a t and module M := M
On_monad
implements monadic folding and mapping operators for a given monad M
, including arity-1 specific operators.
module With_errors :
Travesty.Traversable.S1_on_monad
with type 'a t := 'a t
and module M := Base.Or_error
With_errors
is shorthand for On_monad (Or_error)
.
include Travesty.Traversable.Generic
with type 'a t := 'a t
and type 'a elt := 'a
and module On_monad := On_monad
and module With_errors := With_errors
include Travesty.Types_intf.Generic
with type 'a t := 'a t
with type 'a elt := 'a
We can do generic container operations.
include Base.Container.Generic with type 'a t := 'a t and type 'a elt := 'a
We can do non-monadic mapping operations.
include Travesty.Mappable.Generic with type 'a t := 'a t and type 'a elt := 'a
Generic
refers to the container type as 'a t
, and the element type as 'a elt
; substitute t
/elt
(arity-0) or 'a t
/'a
(arity-1) accordingly below.
include Travesty.Types_intf.Generic
with type 'a t := 'a t
with type 'a elt := 'a
fold_map c ~f ~init
folds f
over every t
in c
, threading through an accumulator with initial value init
.
include Travesty.Mappable.S1_container with type 'a t := 'a t
include Travesty.Mappable.S1 with type 'a t := 'a t
include Travesty.Mappable.Generic with type 'a t := 'a t and type 'a elt := 'a
Generic
refers to the container type as 'a t
, and the element type as 'a elt
; substitute t
/elt
(arity-0) or 'a t
/'a
(arity-1) accordingly below.
include Travesty.Types_intf.Generic
with type 'a t := 'a t
with type 'a elt := 'a
include Base.Container.S1 with type 'a t := 'a t
val mem : 'a t -> 'a -> equal:('a -> 'a -> bool) -> bool
Checks whether the provided element is there, using equal
.
val length : 'a t -> int
val is_empty : 'a t -> bool
val iter : 'a t -> f:('a -> unit) -> unit
val fold : 'a t -> init:'accum -> f:('accum -> 'a -> 'accum) -> 'accum
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 t ->
init:'accum ->
f:('accum -> 'a -> ('accum, 'e) Base.Result.t) ->
('accum, '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 t ->
init:'accum ->
f:('accum -> 'a -> ('accum, 'final) Base.Container.Continue_or_stop.t) ->
finish:('accum -> '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
val exists : 'a t -> f:('a -> bool) -> bool
Returns true
if and only if there exists an element for which the provided function evaluates to true
. This is a short-circuiting operation.
val for_all : 'a t -> f:('a -> bool) -> bool
Returns true
if and only if the provided function evaluates to true
for all elements. This is a short-circuiting operation.
val count : 'a t -> f:('a -> bool) -> int
Returns the number of elements for which the provided function evaluates to true.
val sum :
(module Base.Container.Summable with type t = 'sum) ->
'a t ->
f:('a -> 'sum) ->
'sum
Returns the sum of f i
for all i
in the container.
val find : 'a t -> f:('a -> bool) -> 'a option
Returns as an option
the first element for which f
evaluates to true.
val find_map : 'a t -> f:('a -> 'b option) -> 'b option
Returns the first evaluation of f
that returns Some
, and returns None
if there is no such element.
val to_list : 'a t -> 'a list
val to_array : 'a t -> 'a array
val min_elt : 'a t -> compare:('a -> 'a -> int) -> 'a option
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
.
val max_elt : 'a t -> compare:('a -> 'a -> int) -> 'a option
include Travesty.Mappable.Extensions1 with type 'a t := 'a t
Extensions1
includes the container extensions from Container_exts, as they work with any arity-1 container.
include Travesty.Container_exts.S1 with type 'a t := 'a t
include Travesty.Container_exts.Generic
with type 'a t := 'a t
and type 'a elt := 'a
Generic_extensions
refers to the container type as 'a t
, and the element type as 'a elt
; substitute t
/elt
(arity-0) or 'a t
/'a
(arity-1) accordingly below.
include Travesty.Types_intf.Generic
with type 'a t := 'a t
with type 'a elt := 'a
Testing for a specific number of elements
The following functions help in checking whether a container has a particular, commonly-required number of elements (zero or one, one, two, and so on).
val at_most_one : 'a t -> 'a Base.option Base.Or_error.t
at_most_one xs
returns Ok None
if xs
is empty; Ok Some(x)
if it contains only x
; and an error otherwise.
Examples (using an extended version of List):
List.at_most_one [] (* ok None *)
at_most_one [1] (* ok (Some 1) *)
at_most_one [1; 2] (* error -- too many *)
val one : 'a t -> 'a Base.Or_error.t
one xs
returns Ok x
if xs
contains only x
, and an error otherwise.
Examples (using an extended version of List):
List.one [] (* error -- not enough *)
one [1] (* ok 1 *)
one [1; 2] (* error -- too many *)
val two : 'a t -> ('a * 'a) Base.Or_error.t
two xs
returns Ok (x, y)
if xs
is a list containing only x
and y
in that order, and an error otherwise.
Examples (using an extended version of List):
List.two [] (* error -- not enough *)
two [1] (* error -- not enough *)
two [1; 2] (* ok (1, 2) *)
two [1; 2; 3] (* error -- too many *)
Miscellaneous extensions
Predicate extensions are available on all arity-1 containers, provided that we fix the element type parameter to 'a -> bool
.
include Travesty.Container_exts.Generic_predicate
with type 'a t := ('a -> Base.bool) t
and type 'a item := 'a
any x ~predicates
tests x
against predicates
until one returns true
, in which case it returns true
; or all return false
, in which case it returns false
.
any x ~predicates
tests x
against predicates
until one returns false
, in which case it returns false
; or all return true
, in which case it returns true
.
right_pad ~padding xs
pads every list in xs with padding
, ensuring all lists have equal length.
Example:
right_pad ~padding:6
[ [0; 8; 0; 0] (* [ [ 0; 8; 0; 0; 6 ] *)
; [9; 9; 9] (* ; [ 9; 9; 9; 6; 6 ] *)
; [8; 8; 1; 9; 9] (* ; [ 8; 8; 1; 9; 9 ] *)
; [9; 1; 1; 9] (* ; [ 9; 1; 1; 9; 6 ] *)
; [7; 2; 5] (* ; [ 7; 2; 5; 6; 6 ] *)
; [3] (* ; [ 3; 6; 6; 6; 6 ] *)
] (* ] *)
Options are also filter-mappable; filter-mapping effectively behaves as monadic bind.
include Travesty.Filter_mappable.S1 with type 'a t := 'a t
include Travesty.Filter_mappable.Generic
with type 'a t := 'a t
and type 'a elt := 'a
Generic
strictly extends Generic_basic
.
include Travesty.Filter_mappable.Generic_basic
with type 'a t := 'a t
with type 'a elt := 'a
Generic_basic
refers to the container type as 'a t
, and the element type as 'a elt
; substitute t
/elt
(arity-0) or 'a t
/'a
(arity-1) accordingly below.
include Travesty.Types_intf.Generic
with type 'a t := 'a t
with type 'a elt := 'a
val filter_map : 'a t -> f:('a -> 'b Base.option) -> 'b t
filter_map c ~f
maps f
over every t
in c
, discarding any items for which f
returns None
.
filter c ~f
checks f
over every t
in c
, discarding any items for which f
returns false
.
exclude c ~f
checks f
over every t
in c
, discarding any items for which f
returns true
.
We can also derive Mappable interfaces from filter-mappable ones, but leave that to a separate functor.
Finally, options are a monad, and take the various monad extensions.
include Travesty.Monad_exts.S with type 'a t := 'a t
Haskell-style operators
then_m x y
sequentially composes the actions x
and y
as with >>=
, but, rather than using the returned value of x
, it instead just returns y
.
compose_m f g
is the Kleisli composition of f
and g
.
Guarded monadic computations
map_when_m ?otherwise condition ~f a
is f a
when condition
is true, and otherwise a
(by default, return
) otherwise.
when_m ?otherwise condition ~f
is f ()
when condition
is true, and otherwise ()
(by default, return
) otherwise.
map_unless_m ?otherwise condition ~f a
is f a
when condition
is false, and otherwise a
(by default, return
) otherwise.
unless_m ?otherwise condition ~f
is f ()
when condition
is false, and otherwise ()
(by default, return
) otherwise.
Executing monadic effects in the middle of pipelines
tee_m val ~f
executes f val
for its monadic action, then returns val
.
Example (using an extended Or_error):
let fail_if_negative x =
On_error.when_m (Int.is_negative x)
~f:(fun () -> Or_error.error_string "value is negative!")
in
Or_error.(
42 |> tee_m ~f:fail_if_negative >>| (fun x -> x * x)
) (* Ok (1764) *)
val tee : 'a -> f:('a -> unit) -> 'a t
tee val ~f
behaves as tee, but takes a non-monadic f
.
Example (using an extended Or_error):
let print_if_negative x =
if Int.negative x then Stdio.print_string "value is negative!"
in
Or_error.(
try_get_value ()
>>= tee ~f:print_if_negative
>>= try_use_value ()
)
Applying defaults non-eagerly
value_f opt ~default_f
behaves like value opt ~default:(default_f ())
, but only evaluates the thunk default_f
if value
is None.
val value_l : 'a option -> default_l:'a Lazy.t -> 'a
value_f opt ~default_l
behaves like value opt ~default:(Lazy.force default_l)
, but only forces default_l
if value
is None.