This is a submodule of std.algorithm
. 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 . |
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 . |
splitter | Lazily splits a range by a separator. |
sum | Same as fold , but specialized for accurate summation. |
uniq | Iterates over the unique elements in a range, which is assumed sorted. |
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.
This can be a useful function to place in a chain, after functions that have expensive evaluation, as a lazy alternative to std.array.array
. In particular, it can be placed after a call to map
, or before a call to filter
.
cache
may provide range_primitives.html#.isBidirectionalRange">bidirectional range
iteration if needed, but since this comes at an increased cost, it must be explicitly requested via the call to cacheBidirectional
. Furthermore, a bidirectional cache
will evaluate the "center" element twice, when there is only one element left in the range
.
cache
does not provide random access primitives, as cache
would be unable to cache
the random accesses. If Range
provides slicing primitives, then cache
will provide the same slicing primitives, but hasSlicing!Cache
will not yield true
(as the std.range.primitives.hasSlicing
trait also checks for random access).
Range range
| an range_primitives.html#.isInputRange">input range
|
range
with the cached values of range
import std.algorithm.comparison : equal; import std.range, std.stdio; import std.typecons : tuple; ulong counter = 0; double fun(int x) { ++counter; // http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Quartic_function return ( (x + 4.0) * (x + 1.0) * (x - 1.0) * (x - 3.0) ) / 14.0 + 0.5; } // Without cache, with array (greedy) auto result1 = iota(-4, 5).map!(a =>tuple(a, fun(a)))() .filter!(a => a[1] < 0)() .map!(a => a[0])() .array(); // the values of x that have a negative y are: assert(equal(result1, [-3, -2, 2])); // Check how many times fun was evaluated. // As many times as the number of items in both source and result. writeln(counter); // iota(-4, 5).length + result1.length counter = 0; // Without array, with cache (lazy) auto result2 = iota(-4, 5).map!(a =>tuple(a, fun(a)))() .cache() .filter!(a => a[1] < 0)() .map!(a => a[0])(); // the values of x that have a negative y are: assert(equal(result2, [-3, -2, 2])); // Check how many times fun was evaluated. // Only as many times as the number of items in source. writeln(counter); // iota(-4, 5).length
cache
is eager when evaluating elements. If calling front on the underlying range has a side effect, it will be observable before calling front on the actual cached range. Furthermore, care should be taken composing cache
with std.range.take
. By placing take
before cache
, then cache
will be "aware" of when the range ends, and correctly stop caching elements when needed. If calling front has no side effect though, placing take
after cache
may yield a faster range. Either way, the resulting ranges will be equivalent, but maybe not at the same cost or side effects. import std.algorithm.comparison : equal; import std.range; int i = 0; auto r = iota(0, 4).tee!((a){i = a;}, No.pipeOnPop); auto r1 = r.take(3).cache(); auto r2 = r.cache().take(3); assert(equal(r1, [0, 1, 2])); assert(i == 2); //The last "seen" element was 2. The data in cache has been cleared. assert(equal(r2, [0, 1, 2])); assert(i == 3); //cache has accessed 3. It is still stored internally by cache.
auto map(Range)(Range r) if (isInputRange!(Unqual!Range));
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.
fun | one or more transformation functions |
Range r | an input range |
Tuple
containing one element for each fun. import std.algorithm.comparison : equal; import std.range : chain; int[] arr1 = [ 1, 2, 3, 4 ]; int[] arr2 = [ 5, 6 ]; auto squares = map!(a => a * a)(chain(arr1, arr2)); assert(equal(squares, [ 1, 4, 9, 16, 25, 36 ]));
map
. In that case, the element type of map
is a tuple containing one element for each function. auto sums = [2, 4, 6, 8]; auto products = [1, 4, 9, 16]; size_t i = 0; foreach (result; [ 1, 2, 3, 4 ].map!("a + a", "a * a")) { writeln(result[0]); // sums[i] writeln(result[1]); // products[i] ++i; }
map
with some function(s) to a symbol and use it separately: import std.algorithm.comparison : equal; import std.conv : to; alias stringize = map!(to!string); assert(equal(stringize([ 1, 2, 3, 4 ]), [ "1", "2", "3", "4" ]));
Eagerly iterates over r
and calls pred
over each element.
If no predicate is specified, each
will default to doing nothing but consuming the entire range. .front
will be evaluated, but this can be avoided by explicitly specifying a predicate lambda with a lazy
parameter.
each
also supports opApply
-based iterators, so it will work with e.g. std.parallelism.parallel
.
pred | predicate to apply to each element of the range |
Range r | range or iterable over which each iterates |
std.range.tee
import std.range : iota; long[] arr; iota(5).each!(n => arr ~= n); writeln(arr); // [0, 1, 2, 3, 4] // If the range supports it, the value can be mutated in place arr.each!((ref n) => n++); writeln(arr); // [1, 2, 3, 4, 5] arr.each!"a++"; writeln(arr); // [2, 3, 4, 5, 6] // by-ref lambdas are not allowed for non-ref ranges static assert(!is(typeof(arr.map!(n => n).each!((ref n) => n++)))); // The default predicate consumes the range auto m = arr.map!(n => n); (&m).each(); assert(m.empty); // Indexes are also available for in-place mutations arr[] = 0; arr.each!"a=i"(); writeln(arr); // [0, 1, 2, 3, 4] // opApply iterators work as well static class S { int x; int opApply(scope int delegate(ref int _x) dg) { return dg(x); } } auto s = new S; s.each!"a++"; writeln(s.x); // 1
auto filter(Range)(Range rs) if (isInputRange!(Unqual!Range));
Implements the higher order filter function. The predicate is passed to std.functional.unaryFun
, and can either accept a string, or any callable that can be executed via pred(element)
.
predicate | Function to apply to each element of range |
Range range | Input range of elements |
filter!(predicate)(range)
returns a new range containing only elements x
in range
for which predicate(x)
returns true
. import std.algorithm.comparison : equal; import std.math : approxEqual; import std.range; int[] arr = [ 1, 2, 3, 4, 5 ]; // Sum all elements auto small = filter!(a => a < 3)(arr); assert(equal(small, [ 1, 2 ])); // Sum again, but with Uniform Function Call Syntax (UFCS) auto sum = arr.filter!(a => a < 3); assert(equal(sum, [ 1, 2 ])); // In combination with chain() to span multiple ranges int[] a = [ 3, -2, 400 ]; int[] b = [ 100, -101, 102 ]; auto r = chain(a, b).filter!(a => a > 0); assert(equal(r, [ 3, 400, 100, 102 ])); // Mixing convertible types is fair game, too double[] c = [ 2.5, 3.0 ]; auto r1 = chain(c, a, b).filter!(a => cast(int) a != a); assert(approxEqual(r1, [ 2.5 ]));
auto filterBidirectional(Range)(Range r) if (isBidirectionalRange!(Unqual!Range));
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.range.retro
can be applied against the filtered range.
The predicate is passed to std.functional.unaryFun
, and can either accept a string, or any callable that can be executed via pred(element)
.
pred | Function to apply to each element of range |
Range r | Bidirectional range of elements |
true
.import std.algorithm.comparison : equal; import std.range; int[] arr = [ 1, 2, 3, 4, 5 ]; auto small = filterBidirectional!("a < 3")(arr); static assert(isBidirectionalRange!(typeof(small))); writeln(small.back); // 2 assert(equal(small, [ 1, 2 ])); assert(equal(retro(small), [ 2, 1 ])); // In combination with chain() to span multiple ranges int[] a = [ 3, -2, 400 ]; int[] b = [ 100, -101, 102 ]; auto r = filterBidirectional!("a > 0")(chain(a, b)); writeln(r.back); // 102
Groups consecutively equivalent elements into a single tuple of the element and the number of its repetitions.
Similarly to uniq
, group
produces a range that iterates over unique consecutive elements of the given range. Each element of this range is a tuple of the element and the number of times it is repeated in the original range. Equivalence of elements is assessed by using the predicate pred
, which defaults to "a == b"
. The predicate is passed to std.functional.binaryFun
, and can either accept a string, or any callable that can be executed via pred(element, element)
.
pred | Binary predicate for determining equivalence of two elements. |
Range r
| The input range to iterate over. |
Tuple!(ElementType!R, uint)
, representing each consecutively unique element and its respective number of occurrences in that run. This will be an input range if R
is an input range, and a forward range in all other cases. chunkBy
, which chunks an input range into subranges of equivalent adjacent elements.import std.algorithm.comparison : equal; import std.typecons : tuple, Tuple; int[] arr = [ 1, 2, 2, 2, 2, 3, 4, 4, 4, 5 ]; assert(equal(group(arr), [ tuple(1, 1u), tuple(2, 4u), tuple(3, 1u), tuple(4, 3u), tuple(5, 1u) ][]));
group
, an associative array can be easily generated with the count of each unique element in the range. import std.algorithm.sorting : sort; import std.array : assocArray; uint[string] result; auto range = ["a", "b", "a", "c", "b", "c", "c", "d", "e"]; result = range.sort!((a, b) => a < b) .group .assocArray; writeln(result); // ["a":2U, "b":2U, "c":3U, "d":1U, "e":1U]
Chunks an input range into subranges of equivalent adjacent elements. In other languages this is often called partitionBy
, groupBy
or sliceWhen
.
Equivalence is defined by the predicate pred
, which can be either binary, which is passed to std.functional.binaryFun
, or unary, which is passed to std.functional.unaryFun
. In the binary form, two range elements a
and b
are considered equivalent if pred(a,b)
is true
. In unary form, two elements are considered equivalent if pred(a) == pred(b)
is true
.
This predicate must be an equivalence relation, that is, it must be reflexive (pred(x,x)
is always true
), symmetric (pred(x,y) == pred(y,x)
), and transitive (pred(x,y) && pred(y,z)
implies pred(x,z)
). If this is not the case, the range returned by chunkBy
may assert at runtime or behave erratically.
pred | Predicate for determining equivalence. |
Range r
| An input range to be chunked. |
group
, which collapses adjacent equivalent elements into a single element.import std.algorithm.comparison : equal; // Grouping by particular attribute of each element: auto data = [ [1, 1], [1, 2], [2, 2], [2, 3] ]; auto r1 = data.chunkBy!((a,b) => a[0] == b[0]); assert(r1.equal!equal([ [[1, 1], [1, 2]], [[2, 2], [2, 3]] ])); auto r2 = data.chunkBy!((a,b) => a[1] == b[1]); assert(r2.equal!equal([ [[1, 1]], [[1, 2], [2, 2]], [[2, 3]] ]));
import std.algorithm.comparison : equal; import std.range.primitives; import std.typecons : tuple; // Grouping by particular attribute of each element: auto range = [ [1, 1], [1, 1], [1, 2], [2, 2], [2, 3], [2, 3], [3, 3] ]; auto byX = chunkBy!(a => a[0])(range); auto expected1 = [ tuple(1, [[1, 1], [1, 1], [1, 2]]), tuple(2, [[2, 2], [2, 3], [2, 3]]), tuple(3, [[3, 3]]) ]; foreach (e; byX) { assert(!expected1.empty); writeln(e[0]); // expected1.front[0] assert(e[1].equal(expected1.front[1])); expected1.popFront(); } auto byY = chunkBy!(a => a[1])(range); auto expected2 = [ tuple(1, [[1, 1], [1, 1]]), tuple(2, [[1, 2], [2, 2]]), tuple(3, [[2, 3], [2, 3], [3, 3]]) ]; foreach (e; byY) { assert(!expected2.empty); writeln(e[0]); // expected2.front[0] assert(e[1].equal(expected2.front[1])); expected2.popFront(); }
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).
RoR r
| An input range of input ranges to be joined. |
Separator sep
| A forward range of element(s) to serve as separators in the joined range. |
RoR
are forward ranges; otherwise it will be only an input range. std.range.chain
, which chains a sequence of ranges with compatible elements into a single range.import std.algorithm.comparison : equal; import std.conv : text; assert(["abc", "def"].joiner.equal("abcdef")); assert(["Mary", "has", "a", "little", "lamb"] .joiner("...") .equal("Mary...has...a...little...lamb")); assert(["", "abc"].joiner("xyz").equal("xyzabc")); assert([""].joiner("xyz").equal("")); assert(["", ""].joiner("xyz").equal("xyz"));
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).
result
fun | one or more functions |
fold
is functionally equivalent to reduce
">reduce
with the argument order reversed, and without the need to use tuple
for multiple seeds. This makes it easier to use in UFCS chains. sum
is similar to reduce!((a, b) => a + b)
that offers pairwise summing of floating point numbers.reduce
quickly and easily. The example below illustrates reduce
's remarkable power and flexibility. import std.algorithm.comparison : max, min; import std.math : approxEqual; import std.range; int[] arr = [ 1, 2, 3, 4, 5 ]; // Sum all elements auto sum = reduce!((a,b) => a + b)(0, arr); writeln(sum); // 15 // Sum again, using a string predicate with "a" and "b" sum = reduce!"a + b"(0, arr); writeln(sum); // 15 // Compute the maximum of all elements auto largest = reduce!(max)(arr); writeln(largest); // 5 // Max again, but with Uniform Function Call Syntax (UFCS) largest = arr.reduce!(max); writeln(largest); // 5 // Compute the number of odd elements auto odds = reduce!((a,b) => a + (b & 1))(0, arr); writeln(odds); // 3 // Compute the sum of squares auto ssquares = reduce!((a,b) => a + b * b)(0, arr); writeln(ssquares); // 55 // Chain multiple ranges into seed int[] a = [ 3, 4 ]; int[] b = [ 100 ]; auto r = reduce!("a + b")(chain(a, b)); writeln(r); // 107 // Mixing convertible types is fair game, too double[] c = [ 2.5, 3.0 ]; auto r1 = reduce!("a + b")(chain(a, b, c)); assert(approxEqual(r1, 112.5)); // To minimize nesting of parentheses, Uniform Function Call Syntax can be used auto r2 = chain(a, b, c).reduce!("a + b"); assert(approxEqual(r2, 112.5));
reduce
accepts multiple functions. If two or more functions are passed, reduce
returns a std.typecons.Tuple
object with one member per passed-in function. The number of seeds must be correspondingly increased. import std.algorithm.comparison : max, min; import std.math : approxEqual, sqrt; import std.typecons : tuple, Tuple; double[] a = [ 3.0, 4, 7, 11, 3, 2, 5 ]; // Compute minimum and maximum in one pass auto r = reduce!(min, max)(a); // The type of r is Tuple!(int, int) assert(approxEqual(r[0], 2)); // minimum assert(approxEqual(r[1], 11)); // maximum // Compute sum and sum of squares in one pass r = reduce!("a + b", "a + b * b")(tuple(0.0, 0.0), a); assert(approxEqual(r[0], 35)); // sum assert(approxEqual(r[1], 233)); // sum of squares // Compute average and standard deviation from the above auto avg = r[0] / a.length; writeln(avg); // 5 auto stdev = sqrt(r[1] / a.length - avg * avg); writeln(cast(int)stdev); // 2
No-seed version. The first element of r
is used as the seed's value.
For each function f
in fun
, the corresponding seed type S
is Unqual!(typeof(f(e, e)))
, where e
is an element of r
: ElementType!R
for ranges, and ForeachType!R
otherwise.
Once S has been determined, then S s = e;
and s = f(s, e);
must both be legal.
If r
is empty, an Exception
is thrown.
R r
| an iterable value as defined by isIterable
|
Seed version. The seed
should be a single value if fun
is a single function. If fun
is multiple functions, then seed
should be a std.typecons.Tuple
, with one field per function in f
.
For convenience, if the seed
is const, or has qualified fields, then reduce
will operate on an unqualified copy. If this happens then the returned type will not perfectly match S
.
Use fold
instead of reduce
to use the seed
version in a UFCS chain.
S seed
| the initial value of the accumulator |
R r
| an iterable value as defined by isIterable
|
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).
result
sum
is similar to fold!((a, b) => a + b)
that offers precise summing of floating point numbers. This is functionally equivalent to reduce
with the argument order reversed, and without the need to use tuple
for multiple seeds.immutable arr = [1, 2, 3, 4, 5]; // Sum all elements writeln(arr.fold!( (a, b) => a + b)); // 15 // Sum all elements with explicit seed writeln(arr.fold!( (a, b) => a + b)(6)); // 21 import std.algorithm.comparison : min, max; import std.typecons : tuple; // Compute minimum and maximum at the same time writeln(arr.fold!(min, max)); // tuple(1, 5) // Compute minimum and maximum at the same time with seeds writeln(arr.fold!(min, max)(0, 7)); // tuple(0, 7) // Can be used in a UFCS chain writeln(arr.map!(a => a + 1).fold!( (a, b) => a + b)); // 20 // Return the last element of any range writeln(arr.fold!( (a, b) => b)); // 5
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.
fun | one or more functions to use as fold operation |
fun
, the element type will be std.typecons.Tuple
containing one element for each fun
. import std.algorithm.comparison : max, min; import std.array : array; import std.math : approxEqual; import std.range : chain; int[] arr = [1, 2, 3, 4, 5]; // Partial sum of all elements auto sum = cumulativeFold!((a, b) => a + b)(arr, 0); writeln(sum.array); // [1, 3, 6, 10, 15] // Partial sum again, using a string predicate with "a" and "b" auto sum2 = cumulativeFold!"a + b"(arr, 0); writeln(sum2.array); // [1, 3, 6, 10, 15] // Compute the partial maximum of all elements auto largest = cumulativeFold!max(arr); writeln(largest.array); // [1, 2, 3, 4, 5] // Partial max again, but with Uniform Function Call Syntax (UFCS) largest = arr.cumulativeFold!max; writeln(largest.array); // [1, 2, 3, 4, 5] // Partial count of odd elements auto odds = arr.cumulativeFold!((a, b) => a + (b & 1))(0); writeln(odds.array); // [1, 1, 2, 2, 3] // Compute the partial sum of squares auto ssquares = arr.cumulativeFold!((a, b) => a + b * b)(0); writeln(ssquares.array); // [1, 5, 14, 30, 55] // Chain multiple ranges into seed int[] a = [3, 4]; int[] b = [100]; auto r = cumulativeFold!"a + b"(chain(a, b)); writeln(r.array); // [3, 7, 107] // Mixing convertible types is fair game, too double[] c = [2.5, 3.0]; auto r1 = cumulativeFold!"a + b"(chain(a, b, c)); assert(approxEqual(r1, [3, 7, 107, 109.5, 112.5])); // To minimize nesting of parentheses, Uniform Function Call Syntax can be used auto r2 = chain(a, b, c).cumulativeFold!"a + b"; assert(approxEqual(r2, [3, 7, 107, 109.5, 112.5]));
cumulativeFold
accepts multiple functions. If two or more functions are passed, cumulativeFold
returns a std.typecons.Tuple
object with one member per passed-in function. The number of seeds must be correspondingly increased. import std.algorithm.comparison : max, min; import std.algorithm.iteration : map; import std.math : approxEqual; import std.typecons : tuple; double[] a = [3.0, 4, 7, 11, 3, 2, 5]; // Compute minimum and maximum in one pass auto r = a.cumulativeFold!(min, max); // The type of r is Tuple!(int, int) assert(approxEqual(r.map!"a[0]", [3, 3, 3, 3, 3, 2, 2])); // minimum assert(approxEqual(r.map!"a[1]", [3, 4, 7, 11, 11, 11, 11])); // maximum // Compute sum and sum of squares in one pass auto r2 = a.cumulativeFold!("a + b", "a + b * b")(tuple(0.0, 0.0)); assert(approxEqual(r2.map!"a[0]", [3, 7, 14, 25, 28, 30, 35])); // sum assert(approxEqual(r2.map!"a[1]", [9, 25, 74, 195, 204, 208, 233])); // sum of squares
No-seed version. The first element of r
is used as the seed's value. For each function f
in fun
, the corresponding seed type S
is Unqual!(typeof(f(e, e)))
, where e
is an element of r
: ElementType!R
. Once S
has been determined, then S s = e;
and s = f(s, e);
must both be legal.
R range
| An range_primitives.html#.isInputRange">input range
|
range
containing the consecutive reduced values.Seed version. The seed
should be a single value if fun
is a single function. If fun
is multiple functions, then seed
should be a std.typecons.Tuple
, with one field per function in f
. For convenience, if the seed
is const
, or has qualified fields, then cumulativeFold
will operate on an unqualified copy. If this happens then the returned type will not perfectly match S
.
R range
| An range_primitives.html#.isInputRange">input range
|
S seed
| the initial value of the accumulator |
range
containing the consecutive reduced values.Lazily splits a range using an element as a separator. This can be used with any narrow string type or sliceable range type, but is most popular with string types.
Two adjacent separators are considered to surround an empty element in the split range. Use filter!(a => !a.empty)
on the result to compress empty elements.
The predicate is passed to std.functional.binaryFun
, and can either accept a string, or any callable that can be executed via pred(element, s)
.
If the empty range is given, the result is a range with one empty element. If a range with one separator is given, the result is a range with two empty elements.
If splitting a string on whitespace and token compression is desired, consider using splitter
without specifying a separator (see fourth overload below).
pred | The predicate for comparing each element with the separator, defaulting to "a == b" . |
Range r
| The input range to be split. Must support slicing and .length . |
Separator s
| The element to be treated as the separator between range segments to be split. |
pred
needs to accept an element of r
and the separator s
. r
is a forward range or bidirectional range, the returned range will be likewise. std.regex.splitter
for a version that splits using a regular expression defined separator.import std.algorithm.comparison : equal; assert(equal(splitter("hello world", ' '), [ "hello", "", "world" ])); int[] a = [ 1, 2, 0, 0, 3, 0, 4, 5, 0 ]; int[][] w = [ [1, 2], [], [3], [4, 5], [] ]; assert(equal(splitter(a, 0), w)); a = [ 0 ]; assert(equal(splitter(a, 0), [ (int[]).init, (int[]).init ])); a = [ 0, 1 ]; assert(equal(splitter(a, 0), [ [], [1] ])); w = [ [0], [1], [2] ]; assert(equal(splitter!"a.front == b"(w, 1), [ [[0]], [[2]] ]));
Similar to the previous overload of splitter
, except this one uses another range as a separator. This can be used with any narrow string type or sliceable range type, but is most popular with string types. The predicate is passed to std.functional.binaryFun
, and can either accept a string, or any callable that can be executed via pred(r.front, s.front)
.
Two adjacent separators are considered to surround an empty element in the split range. Use filter!(a => !a.empty)
on the result to compress empty elements.
pred | The predicate for comparing each element with the separator, defaulting to "a == b" . |
Range r
| The input range to be split. |
Separator s
| The forward range to be treated as the separator between segments of r to be split. |
pred
needs to accept an element of r
and an element of s
. r
is a forward range or bidirectional range, the returned range will be likewise. std.regex.splitter
for a version that splits using a regular expression defined separator.import std.algorithm.comparison : equal; assert(equal(splitter("hello world", " "), [ "hello", "world" ])); int[] a = [ 1, 2, 0, 0, 3, 0, 4, 5, 0 ]; int[][] w = [ [1, 2], [3, 0, 4, 5, 0] ]; assert(equal(splitter(a, [0, 0]), w)); a = [ 0, 0 ]; assert(equal(splitter(a, [0, 0]), [ (int[]).init, (int[]).init ])); a = [ 0, 0, 1 ]; assert(equal(splitter(a, [0, 0]), [ [], [1] ]));
Similar to the previous overload of splitter
, except this one does not use a separator. Instead, the predicate is an unary function on the input
range's element type. The isTerminator
predicate is passed to std.functional.unaryFun
and can either accept a string, or any callable that can be executed via pred(element, s)
.
Two adjacent separators are considered to surround an empty element in the split range. Use filter!(a => !a.empty)
on the result to compress empty elements.
isTerminator | The predicate for deciding where to split the range. |
Range input
| The input range to be split. |
isTerminator
needs to accept an element of input
. input
range of the subranges of elements between separators. If input
is a forward range or bidirectional range, the returned range will be likewise. std.regex.splitter
for a version that splits using a regular expression defined separator.import std.algorithm.comparison : equal; import std.range.primitives : front; assert(equal(splitter!(a => a == ' ')("hello world"), [ "hello", "", "world" ])); int[] a = [ 1, 2, 0, 0, 3, 0, 4, 5, 0 ]; int[][] w = [ [1, 2], [], [3], [4, 5], [] ]; assert(equal(splitter!(a => a == 0)(a), w)); a = [ 0 ]; assert(equal(splitter!(a => a == 0)(a), [ (int[]).init, (int[]).init ])); a = [ 0, 1 ]; assert(equal(splitter!(a => a == 0)(a), [ [], [1] ])); w = [ [0], [1], [2] ]; assert(equal(splitter!(a => a.front == 1)(w), [ [[0]], [[2]] ]));
Lazily splits the string s
into words, using whitespace as the delimiter.
This function is string specific and, contrary to splitter!(std.uni.isWhite)
, runs of whitespace will be merged together (no empty tokens will be produced).
C[] s
| The string to be split. |
import std.algorithm.comparison : equal; auto a = " a bcd ef gh "; assert(equal(splitter(a), ["a", "bcd", "ef", "gh"][]));
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.
std.range.primitives.ElementType!R
is a floating-point type and R
is a random-access range with length and slicing, then sum
uses the pairwise summation algorithm.ElementType!R
is a floating-point type and R
is a finite input range (but not a random-access range with slicing), then sum
uses the Kahan summation algorithm.real
precision for real
inputs and in double
precision otherwise (Note this is a special case that deviates from fold
's behavior, which would have kept float
precision for a float
range). For all other types, the calculations are done in the same type obtained from from adding two elements of the range, which may be a different type from the elements themselves (for example, in case of integral promotion). seed
may be passed to sum
. Not only will this seed
be used as an initial value, but its type will override all the above, and determine the algorithm and precision used for summation. fold!((a, b) => a + b)(r, 0)
, which is not specialized for summation. E seed
| the initial value of the summation |
R r
| a finite input range |
sum
of all the elements in the range r
.Lazily iterates unique consecutive elements of the given range (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 std.functional.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.
pred | Predicate for determining equivalence between range elements. |
Range r
| An input range of elements to filter. |
r
is also a forward range or bidirectional range, the returned range will be likewise.import std.algorithm.comparison : equal; import std.algorithm.mutation : copy; int[] arr = [ 1, 2, 2, 2, 2, 3, 4, 4, 4, 5 ]; assert(equal(uniq(arr), [ 1, 2, 3, 4, 5 ][])); // Filter duplicates in-place using copy arr.length -= arr.uniq().copy(arr).length; writeln(arr); // [1, 2, 3, 4, 5] // Note that uniqueness is only determined consecutively; duplicated // elements separated by an intervening different element will not be // eliminated: assert(equal(uniq([ 1, 1, 2, 1, 1, 3, 1]), [1, 2, 1, 3, 1]));
Lazily computes all permutations of r
using Heap's algorithm.
std.range.indexed
view into r
. std.algorithm.sorting.nextPermutation
.import std.algorithm.comparison : equal; import std.range : iota; assert(equal!equal(iota(3).permutations, [[0, 1, 2], [1, 0, 2], [2, 0, 1], [0, 2, 1], [1, 2, 0], [2, 1, 0]]));
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Licensed under the Boost License 1.0.
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