split-0.2.3.5: Combinator library for splitting lists.
Copyright (c) Brent Yorgey Louis Wasserman 2008-2012
License BSD-style (see LICENSE)
Maintainer Brent Yorgey <byorgey@gmail.com>
Stability stable
Portability Haskell 2010
Safe Haskell Safe-Inferred
Language Haskell2010

Data.List.Split.Internals

Description

Implementation module for Data.List.Split , a combinator library for splitting lists. See the Data.List.Split documentation for more description and examples.

Synopsis

Types and utilities

data Splitter a Source #

A splitting strategy.

Constructors

Splitter

Fields

defaultSplitter :: Splitter a Source #

The default splitting strategy: keep delimiters in the output as separate chunks, don't condense multiple consecutive delimiters into one, keep initial and final blank chunks. Default delimiter is the constantly false predicate.

Note that defaultSplitter should normally not be used; use oneOf , onSublist , or whenElt instead, which are the same as the defaultSplitter with just the delimiter overridden.

The defaultSplitter strategy with any delimiter gives a maximally information-preserving splitting strategy, in the sense that (a) taking the concat of the output yields the original list, and (b) given only the output list, we can reconstruct a Splitter which would produce the same output list again given the original input list. This default strategy can be overridden to allow discarding various sorts of information.

newtype Delimiter a Source #

A delimiter is a list of predicates on elements, matched by some contiguous subsequence of a list.

Constructors

Delimiter [a -> Bool ]

matchDelim :: Delimiter a -> [a] -> Maybe ([a], [a]) Source #

Try to match a delimiter at the start of a list, either failing or decomposing the list into the portion which matched the delimiter and the remainder.

data DelimPolicy Source #

What to do with delimiters?

Constructors

Drop

Drop delimiters from the output.

Keep

Keep delimiters as separate chunks of the output.

KeepLeft

Keep delimiters in the output, prepending them to the following chunk.

KeepRight

Keep delimiters in the output, appending them to the previous chunk.

data CondensePolicy Source #

What to do with multiple consecutive delimiters?

Constructors

Condense

Condense into a single delimiter.

DropBlankFields

Keep consecutive delimiters separate, but don't insert blank chunks in between them.

KeepBlankFields

Insert blank chunks between consecutive delimiters.

type SplitList a = [ Chunk a] Source #

Internal representation of a split list that tracks which pieces are delimiters and which aren't.

isDelim :: Chunk a -> Bool Source #

Test whether a Chunk is a delimiter.

isText :: Chunk a -> Bool Source #

Test whether a Chunk is text.

Implementation

splitInternal :: Delimiter a -> [a] -> SplitList a Source #

Given a delimiter to use, split a list into an internal representation with chunks tagged as delimiters or text. This transformation is lossless; in particular,

  concatMap fromElem (splitInternal d l) == l.

postProcess :: Splitter a -> SplitList a -> SplitList a Source #

Given a split list in the internal tagged representation, produce a new internal tagged representation corresponding to the final output, according to the strategy defined by the given Splitter .

doCondense :: CondensePolicy -> SplitList a -> SplitList a Source #

Condense multiple consecutive delimiters into one if the CondensePolicy is Condense .

insertBlanks :: CondensePolicy -> SplitList a -> SplitList a Source #

Insert blank chunks between any remaining consecutive delimiters (unless the condense policy is DropBlankFields ), and at the beginning or end if the first or last element is a delimiter.

insertBlanks' :: CondensePolicy -> SplitList a -> SplitList a Source #

Insert blank chunks between consecutive delimiters.

doMerge :: DelimPolicy -> SplitList a -> SplitList a Source #

Merge delimiters into adjacent chunks according to the DelimPolicy .

mergeLeft :: SplitList a -> SplitList a Source #

Merge delimiters with adjacent chunks to the right (yes, that's not a typo: the delimiters should end up on the left of the chunks, so they are merged with chunks to their right).

mergeRight :: SplitList a -> SplitList a Source #

Merge delimiters with adjacent chunks to the left.

dropInitial :: EndPolicy -> SplitList a -> SplitList a Source #

Drop an initial blank chunk according to the given EndPolicy .

dropFinal :: EndPolicy -> SplitList a -> SplitList a Source #

Drop a final blank chunk according to the given EndPolicy .

Combinators

split :: Splitter a -> [a] -> [[a]] Source #

Split a list according to the given splitting strategy. This is how to "run" a Splitter that has been built using the other combinators.

Basic strategies

All these basic strategies have the same parameters as the defaultSplitter except for the delimiters.

oneOf :: Eq a => [a] -> Splitter a Source #

A splitting strategy that splits on any one of the given elements. For example:

split (oneOf "xyz") "aazbxyzcxd" == ["aa","z","b","x","","y","","z","c","x","d"]

onSublist :: Eq a => [a] -> Splitter a Source #

A splitting strategy that splits on the given list, when it is encountered as an exact subsequence. For example:

split (onSublist "xyz") "aazbxyzcxd" == ["aazb","xyz","cxd"]

Note that splitting on the empty list is a special case, which splits just before every element of the list being split. For example:

split (onSublist "") "abc" == ["","","a","","b","","c"]
split (dropDelims . dropBlanks $ onSublist "") "abc" == ["a","b","c"]

However, if you want to break a list into singleton elements like this, you are better off using chunksOf 1 , or better yet, map (:[]) .

whenElt :: (a -> Bool ) -> Splitter a Source #

A splitting strategy that splits on any elements that satisfy the given predicate. For example:

split (whenElt (<0)) [2,4,-3,6,-9,1] == [[2,4],[-3],[6],[-9],[1]]

Strategy transformers

dropDelims :: Splitter a -> Splitter a Source #

Drop delimiters from the output (the default is to keep them). For example,

split (oneOf ":") "a:b:c" == ["a", ":", "b", ":", "c"]
split (dropDelims $ oneOf ":") "a:b:c" == ["a", "b", "c"]

keepDelimsL :: Splitter a -> Splitter a Source #

Keep delimiters in the output by prepending them to adjacent chunks. For example:

split (keepDelimsL $ oneOf "xyz") "aazbxyzcxd" == ["aa","zb","x","y","zc","xd"]

keepDelimsR :: Splitter a -> Splitter a Source #

Keep delimiters in the output by appending them to adjacent chunks. For example:

split (keepDelimsR $ oneOf "xyz") "aazbxyzcxd" == ["aaz","bx","y","z","cx","d"]

condense :: Splitter a -> Splitter a Source #

Condense multiple consecutive delimiters into one. For example:

split (condense $ oneOf "xyz") "aazbxyzcxd" == ["aa","z","b","xyz","c","x","d"]
split (dropDelims $ oneOf "xyz") "aazbxyzcxd" == ["aa","b","","","c","d"]
split (condense . dropDelims $ oneOf "xyz") "aazbxyzcxd" == ["aa","b","c","d"]

dropInitBlank :: Splitter a -> Splitter a Source #

Don't generate a blank chunk if there is a delimiter at the beginning. For example:

split (oneOf ":") ":a:b" == ["",":","a",":","b"]
split (dropInitBlank $ oneOf ":") ":a:b" == [":","a",":","b"]

dropFinalBlank :: Splitter a -> Splitter a Source #

Don't generate a blank chunk if there is a delimiter at the end. For example:

split (oneOf ":") "a:b:" == ["a",":","b",":",""]
split (dropFinalBlank $ oneOf ":") "a:b:" == ["a",":","b",":"]

dropInnerBlanks :: Splitter a -> Splitter a Source #

Don't generate blank chunks between consecutive delimiters. For example:

split (oneOf ":") "::b:::a" == ["",":","",":","b",":","",":","",":","a"]
split (dropInnerBlanks $ oneOf ":") "::b:::a" == ["", ":",":","b",":",":",":","a"]

Derived combinators

dropBlanks :: Splitter a -> Splitter a Source #

Drop all blank chunks from the output, and condense consecutive delimiters into one. Equivalent to dropInitBlank . dropFinalBlank . condense . For example:

split (oneOf ":") "::b:::a" == ["",":","",":","b",":","",":","",":","a"]
split (dropBlanks $ oneOf ":") "::b:::a" == ["::","b",":::","a"]

startsWith :: Eq a => [a] -> Splitter a Source #

Make a strategy that splits a list into chunks that all start with the given subsequence (except possibly the first). Equivalent to dropInitBlank . keepDelimsL . onSublist . For example:

split (startsWith "app") "applyapplicativeapplaudapproachapple" == ["apply","applicative","applaud","approach","apple"]

startsWithOneOf :: Eq a => [a] -> Splitter a Source #

Make a strategy that splits a list into chunks that all start with one of the given elements (except possibly the first). Equivalent to dropInitBlank . keepDelimsL . oneOf . For example:

split (startsWithOneOf ['A'..'Z']) "ACamelCaseIdentifier" == ["A","Camel","Case","Identifier"]

endsWith :: Eq a => [a] -> Splitter a Source #

Make a strategy that splits a list into chunks that all end with the given subsequence, except possibly the last. Equivalent to dropFinalBlank . keepDelimsR . onSublist . For example:

split (endsWith "ly") "happilyslowlygnarlylily" == ["happily","slowly","gnarly","lily"]

endsWithOneOf :: Eq a => [a] -> Splitter a Source #

Make a strategy that splits a list into chunks that all end with one of the given elements, except possibly the last. Equivalent to dropFinalBlank . keepDelimsR . oneOf . For example:

split (condense $ endsWithOneOf ".,?! ") "Hi, there!  How are you?" == ["Hi, ","there!  ","How ","are ","you?"]

Convenience functions

splitOneOf :: Eq a => [a] -> [a] -> [[a]] Source #

Split on any of the given elements. Equivalent to split . dropDelims . oneOf . For example:

splitOneOf ";.," "foo,bar;baz.glurk" == ["foo","bar","baz","glurk"]

splitOn :: Eq a => [a] -> [a] -> [[a]] Source #

Split on the given sublist. Equivalent to split . dropDelims . onSublist . For example:

splitOn ".." "a..b...c....d.." == ["a","b",".c","","d",""]

In some parsing combinator frameworks this is also known as sepBy .

Note that this is the right inverse of the intercalate function from Data.List , that is,

intercalate x . splitOn x === id

splitOn x . intercalate x is the identity on certain lists, but it is tricky to state the precise conditions under which this holds. (For example, it is not enough to say that x does not occur in any elements of the input list. Working out why is left as an exercise for the reader.)

splitWhen :: (a -> Bool ) -> [a] -> [[a]] Source #

Split on elements satisfying the given predicate. Equivalent to split . dropDelims . whenElt . For example:

splitWhen (<0) [1,3,-4,5,7,-9,0,2] == [[1,3],[5,7],[0,2]]

endBy :: Eq a => [a] -> [a] -> [[a]] Source #

Split into chunks terminated by the given subsequence. Equivalent to split . dropFinalBlank . dropDelims . onSublist . For example:

endBy ";" "foo;bar;baz;" == ["foo","bar","baz"]

Note also that the lines function from Data.List is equivalent to endBy "\n" .

endByOneOf :: Eq a => [a] -> [a] -> [[a]] Source #

Split into chunks terminated by one of the given elements. Equivalent to split . dropFinalBlank . dropDelims . oneOf . For example:

endByOneOf ";," "foo;bar,baz;" == ["foo","bar","baz"]

wordsBy :: (a -> Bool ) -> [a] -> [[a]] Source #

Split into "words", with word boundaries indicated by the given predicate. Satisfies words === wordsBy isSpace ; equivalent to split . dropBlanks . dropDelims . whenElt . For example:

wordsBy (=='x') "dogxxxcatxbirdxx" == ["dog","cat","bird"]

linesBy :: (a -> Bool ) -> [a] -> [[a]] Source #

Split into "lines", with line boundaries indicated by the given predicate. Satisfies lines === linesBy (=='n') ; equivalent to split . dropFinalBlank . dropDelims . whenElt . For example:

linesBy (=='x') "dogxxxcatxbirdxx" == ["dog","","","cat","bird",""]

Other splitting methods

build :: ((a -> [a] -> [a]) -> [a] -> [a]) -> [a] Source #

Standard build function, specialized to building lists.

Usually build is given the rank-2 type

build :: (forall b. (a -> b -> b) -> b -> b) -> [a]

but since we only use it when (b ~ [a]) , we give it the more restricted type signature in order to avoid needing a non-Haskell2010 extension.

Note that the 0.1.4.3 release of this package did away with a custom build implementation in favor of importing one from GHC.Exts , which was (reportedly) faster for some applications. However, in the interest of simplicity and complete Haskell2010 compliance as split is being included in the Haskel Platform, version 0.2.1.0 has gone back to defining build manually. This is in line with split 's design philosophy of having efficiency as a non-goal.

chunksOf :: Int -> [e] -> [[e]] Source #

chunksOf n splits a list into length-n pieces. The last piece will be shorter if n does not evenly divide the length of the list. If n <= 0 , chunksOf n l returns an infinite list of empty lists. For example:

Note that chunksOf n [] is [] , not [[]] . This is intentional, and is consistent with a recursive definition of chunksOf ; it satisfies the property that

chunksOf n xs ++ chunksOf n ys == chunksOf n (xs ++ ys)

whenever n evenly divides the length of xs .

splitPlaces :: Integral a => [a] -> [e] -> [[e]] Source #

Split a list into chunks of the given lengths. For example:

splitPlaces [2,3,4] [1..20] == [[1,2],[3,4,5],[6,7,8,9]]
splitPlaces [4,9] [1..10] == [[1,2,3,4],[5,6,7,8,9,10]]
splitPlaces [4,9,3] [1..10] == [[1,2,3,4],[5,6,7,8,9,10]]

If the input list is longer than the total of the given lengths, then the remaining elements are dropped. If the list is shorter than the total of the given lengths, then the result may contain fewer chunks than requested, and the last chunk may be shorter than requested.

splitPlacesBlanks :: Integral a => [a] -> [e] -> [[e]] Source #

Split a list into chunks of the given lengths. Unlike splitPlaces , the output list will always be the same length as the first input argument. If the input list is longer than the total of the given lengths, then the remaining elements are dropped. If the list is shorter than the total of the given lengths, then the last several chunks will be shorter than requested or empty. For example:

splitPlacesBlanks [2,3,4] [1..20] == [[1,2],[3,4,5],[6,7,8,9]]
splitPlacesBlanks [4,9] [1..10] == [[1,2,3,4],[5,6,7,8,9,10]]
splitPlacesBlanks [4,9,3] [1..10] == [[1,2,3,4],[5,6,7,8,9,10],[]]

Notice the empty list in the output of the third example, which differs from the behavior of splitPlaces .

chop :: ([a] -> (b, [a])) -> [a] -> [b] Source #

A useful recursion pattern for processing a list to produce a new list, often used for "chopping" up the input list. Typically chop is called with some function that will consume an initial prefix of the list and produce a value and the rest of the list.

For example, many common Prelude functions can be implemented in terms of chop :

group :: (Eq a) => [a] -> [[a]]
group = chop (\ xs@(x:_) -> span (==x) xs)

words :: String -> [String]
words = filter (not . null) . chop (span (not . isSpace) . dropWhile isSpace)

divvy :: Int -> Int -> [a] -> [[a]] Source #

Divides up an input list into a set of sublists, according to n and m input specifications you provide. Each sublist will have n items, and the start of each sublist will be offset by m items from the previous one.

divvy 5 5 [1..20] == [[1,2,3,4,5],[6,7,8,9,10],[11,12,13,14,15],[16,17,18,19,20]]

In the case where a source list's trailing elements do no fill an entire sublist, those trailing elements will be dropped.

divvy 5 2 [1..10] == [[1,2,3,4,5],[3,4,5,6,7],[5,6,7,8,9]]

As an example, you can generate a moving average over a list of prices:

type Prices = [Float]
type AveragePrices = [Float]

average :: [Float] -> Float
average xs = sum xs / (fromIntegral $ length xs)

simpleMovingAverage :: Prices -> AveragePrices
simpleMovingAverage priceList =
  map average divvyedPrices
    where divvyedPrices = divvy 20 1 priceList