* list composition functions
@ 2000-10-15 23:42 Julian Assange
2000-10-16 6:57 ` Jacques Garrigue
2000-10-16 7:58 ` Alain Frisch
0 siblings, 2 replies; 4+ messages in thread
From: Julian Assange @ 2000-10-15 23:42 UTC (permalink / raw)
To: caml-list; +Cc: proff
Imagine you have the follow three functions,
let mirror x = [x;x]
let plus1 x = [x+1]
let none x = []
I'm trying to define an operator (>>) that will then operate like so
(mirror >> mirror >> plus1) [1]
[2;2;2;2]
let (>>) a b = function x ->
let rec loop = function
[] -> []
| hd::tl ->
let rec loop2 = function
[] -> loop tl
| hd::tl -> b hd @ loop2 tl
in
loop2 (a hd)
in
loop x
# (>>);;
- : ('a -> 'b list) -> ('b -> 'c list) -> 'a list -> 'c list = <fun>
While this looks okay, and works fine for two applications, the list
type keeps on growing with each partial application.
plus1 >> plus1 >> plus1 >> plus1;;
- : int list list list -> int list = <fun>
#
Is there anyway I can prevent this, short of making plus1, etc symmetric
with respect to their argument types?
^ permalink raw reply [flat|nested] 4+ messages in thread
* Re: list composition functions
2000-10-15 23:42 list composition functions Julian Assange
@ 2000-10-16 6:57 ` Jacques Garrigue
2000-10-16 7:58 ` Alain Frisch
1 sibling, 0 replies; 4+ messages in thread
From: Jacques Garrigue @ 2000-10-16 6:57 UTC (permalink / raw)
To: proff; +Cc: caml-list
From: Julian Assange <proff@iq.org>
> Imagine you have the follow three functions,
>
> let mirror x = [x;x]
> let plus1 x = [x+1]
> let none x = []
>
> I'm trying to define an operator (>>) that will then operate like so
>
> (mirror >> mirror >> plus1) [1]
>
> [2;2;2;2]
>
> let (>>) a b l = List.flatten (List.map b (List.flatten (List.map a l)))
>
> # (>>);;
> - : ('a -> 'b list) -> ('b -> 'c list) -> 'a list -> 'c list = <fun>
>
> While this looks okay, and works fine for two applications, the list
> type keeps on growing with each partial application.
>
> plus1 >> plus1 >> plus1 >> plus1;;
> - : int list list list -> int list = <fun>
> #
>
> Is there anyway I can prevent this, short of making plus1, etc symmetric
> with respect to their argument types?
The problem is that your (a >> b) does not bear any symmetry with the
argument functions.
I can see at least two candidates for this.
1) The bind of the non-determinism monad:
# let (>>) l f = List.flatten (List.map f l);;
val ( >> ) : 'a list -> ('a -> 'b list) -> 'b list = <fun>
# [1] >> mirror >> mirror >> plus1;;
- : int list = [2; 2; 2; 2]
2) Flattening composition
# let (>>) a b x = List.flatten (List.map b (a x));;
val ( >> ) : ('a -> 'b list) -> ('b -> 'c list) -> 'a -> 'c list = <fun>
# (mirror >> mirror >> plus1) 1;;
- : int list = [2; 2; 2; 2]
They both slightly differ from what you were asking for, but I see no
other way to proceed as long as your basic blocks have type ('a -> 'b
list).
Jacques Garrigue
^ permalink raw reply [flat|nested] 4+ messages in thread
* Re: list composition functions
2000-10-15 23:42 list composition functions Julian Assange
2000-10-16 6:57 ` Jacques Garrigue
@ 2000-10-16 7:58 ` Alain Frisch
2000-10-16 12:22 ` Julian Assange
1 sibling, 1 reply; 4+ messages in thread
From: Alain Frisch @ 2000-10-16 7:58 UTC (permalink / raw)
To: Julian Assange; +Cc: caml-list
On 16 Oct 2000, Julian Assange wrote:
> Imagine you have the follow three functions,
>
> let mirror x = [x;x]
> let plus1 x = [x+1]
> let none x = []
>
> I'm trying to define an operator (>>) that will then operate like so
>
> (mirror >> mirror >> plus1) [1]
>
> [2;2;2;2]
You could try something like:
let build_transformer f x =
List.concat (List.map f x)
let (>>) t1 t2 x =
t1 (t2 x)
let mirror = build_transformer (fun x -> [x;x])
let plus1 = build_transformer (fun x -> [x+1])
let none = build_transformer (fun x -> [])
(mirror and none are not generalized since their definition
is expansive)
--
Alain Frisch
^ permalink raw reply [flat|nested] 4+ messages in thread
* Re: list composition functions
2000-10-16 7:58 ` Alain Frisch
@ 2000-10-16 12:22 ` Julian Assange
0 siblings, 0 replies; 4+ messages in thread
From: Julian Assange @ 2000-10-16 12:22 UTC (permalink / raw)
To: Alain Frisch; +Cc: Julian Assange, caml-list
> On 16 Oct 2000, Julian Assange wrote:
>
> You could try something like:
>
> let build_transformer f x =
> List.concat (List.map f x)
>
> let (>>) t1 t2 x =
> t1 (t2 x)
The problem with this is that it builds an intermediary list at each stage,
before handing it to the next. The function that I used does not.
Cheers,
Julian.
^ permalink raw reply [flat|nested] 4+ messages in thread
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2000-10-15 23:42 list composition functions Julian Assange
2000-10-16 6:57 ` Jacques Garrigue
2000-10-16 7:58 ` Alain Frisch
2000-10-16 12:22 ` Julian Assange
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