Checks whether the provided element is there, using polymorphic compare if equal
is not provided
fold t ~init ~f returns f (... f (f (f init e1) e2) e3 ...) en, where e1..en
are the elements of t
Returns true if and only if there exists an element for which the provided
function evaluates to true. This is a short-circuiting operation.
Returns true if and only if the provided function evaluates to true for all
elements. This is a short-circuiting operation.
Returns the number of elements for which the provided function evaluates to true.
Returns as an option the first element for which f evaluates to true.
Returns the first evaluation of f that returns Some, and returns None if there
is no such element.
Returns a minimum (resp maximum) element from the collection using the provided
cmp 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.
A monad is an abstraction of the concept of sequencing of computations. A value of type 'a monad represents a computation that returns a value of type 'a.
return v returns the (trivial) computation that returns v.
Return the n-th element of the given list.
The first element (head of the list) is at position 0.
Raise if the list is too short or n is negative.
fold_left is the same as fold, and one should always use fold rather than
fold_left, except in functors that are parameterized over a more general signature
where this equivalence does not hold.
Like List.for_all, but passes the index as an argument.
Like List.exists, but passes the index as an argument.
partition_tf l ~f returns a pair of lists (l1, l2), where l1 is the list of all the
elements of l that satisfy the predicate p, and l2 is the list of all the
elements of l that do not satisfy p. The order of the elements in the input list
is preserved. The "tf" suffix is mnemonic to remind readers at a call that the result
is (trues, falses).
Sort a list in increasing order according to a comparison function. The comparison function must return 0 if its arguments compare as equal, a positive integer if the first is greater, and a negative integer if the first is smaller (see Array.sort for a complete specification). For example, Pervasives.compare is a suitable comparison function.
The current implementation uses Merge Sort. It runs in linear heap space and logarithmic stack space.
Presently, the sort is stable, meaning that two equal elements in the input will be in the same order in the output.
Merge two lists: assuming that l1 and l2 are sorted according to the comparison
function cmp, merge cmp l1 l2 will return a sorted list containing all the
elements of l1 and l2. If several elements compare equal, the elements of l1
will be before the elements of l2.
Return the first element of the given list. Raise if the list is empty.
find_exn t ~f returns the first element of t that satisfies f. It raises
Not_found if there is no such element.
Returns the first evaluation of f that returns Some. Raises Not_found if f
always returns None.
Like find_map and find_map_exn, but pass the index as an argument.
List.fold_right [a1; ...; an] ~f ~init:b is
f a1 (f a2 (... (f an b) ...)).
iteri is just like iter, but it also passes in the index of each element as the first argument to the iter'd function. Tail-recursive.
foldi is just like fold, but it also passes in the index of each element as the first argument to the folded function. Tail-recursive.
reduce_exn [a1; ...; an] ~f is f (... (f (f a1 a2) a3) ...) an. It fails on the
empty list. Tail recursive.
reduce_balanced returns the same value as reduce when f is associative, but
differs in that the tree of nested applications of f has logarithmic depth.
This is useful when your 'a grows in size as you reduce it and f becomes more
expensive with bigger inputs. For example, reduce_balanced ~f:(^) takes n*log(n)
time, while reduce ~f:(^) takes quadratic time.
group l ~break returns a list of lists (i.e., groups) whose concatenation is
equal to the original list. Each group is broken where break returns true on
a pair of successive elements.
Example
group ~break:(<>) 'M';'i';'s';'s';'i';'s';'s';'i';'p';'p';'i' ->
['M'];['i'];['s';'s'];['i'];['s';'s'];['i'];['p';'p'];['i']
This is just like group, except that you get the index in the original list of the current element along with the two elements.
Example, group the chars of Mississippi into triples
groupi ~break:(fun i _ _ -> i mod 3 = 0)
'M';'i';'s';'s';'i';'s';'s';'i';'p';'p';'i' ->
['M'; 'i'; 's']; ['s'; 'i'; 's']; ['s'; 'i'; 'p']; ['p'; 'i']
The final element of a list. The _exn version raises on the empty list.
find_consecutive_duplicate t ~equal returns the first pair of consecutive elements
(a1, a2) in t such that equal a1 a2. They are returned in the same order as
they appear in t. equal need not be an equivalence relation; it is simply used as
a predicate on consecutive elements.
contains_dup True if there are any two elements in the list which are the same.
find_a_dup returns a duplicate from the list (no guarantees about which
duplicate you get), or None if there are no dups.
find_all_dups returns a list of all elements that occur more than once, with
no guarantees about order.
exn_if_dup ?compare ?context t ~to_sexp will run find_a_dup on t, and raise
Duplicate_found if a duplicate is found. The context is the second argument of
the exception
count l ~f is the number of elements in l that satisfy the predicate f.
range ?stride ?start ?stop start_i stop_i is the list of integers from start_i to
stop_i, stepping by stride. If stride < 0 then we need start_i > stop_i for
the result to be nonempty (or start_i = stop_i in the case where both bounds are
inclusive).
range' is analogous to range for general start/stop/stride types. range' raises
if stride x returns x or if the direction that stride x moves x changes from
one call to the next.
init n ~f is [(f 0); (f 1); ...; (f (n-1))]. It is an error if n < 0.
permute ?random_state t returns a permutation of t.
permute side affects random_state by repeated calls to Random.State.int.
If random_state is not supplied, permute uses Random.State.default.
is_sorted t ~compare returns true iff forall adjacent a1; a2 in t, compare a1
a2 <= 0.
is_sorted_strictly is similar, except it uses < instead of <=.
transpose m transposes the rows and columns of the matrix m,
considered as either a row of column lists or (dually) a column of row lists.
Example,
transpose [1;2;3];[4;5;6] = [1;4];[2;5];[3;6]
On non-empty rectangular matrices, transpose is an involution
(i.e., transpose (transpose m) = m). Transpose returns None when called
on lists of lists with non-uniform lengths.
*
Quickcheck generator for lists with additional customization.
List.gen' t produces a generator for arbitrary lists of values from t.
Adding ~unique:true guarantees that every value from t is included in each list
at most once.
~length:(`Exactly n) produces only lists of length n.~length:(`At_least n) produces only lists of length n or greater.~length:(`At_most n) produces only lists of length n or less.~length:(`Between_inclusive (m,n)) produces only lists of length k such
that m <= k and k <= n.Adding ~sorted:`Arbitrarily produces lists that are sorted in a deterministic
order based on the construction of t, but not guaranteed to correspond to any
specific comparison function.
Adding ~sorted:(`By cmp) produces lists that are sorted in ascending order by
cmp.
The optional arguments can be combined; for example, the following expression creates lists of 10 to 20 integers each that are strictly sorted (no duplicates):
gen' Int.gen
~unique:true
~sorted:(`By Int.compare)
~length:(`Between_inclusive (10,20))
Regardless of the options provided, the lists in the output of list t are
generated uniquely, so long as the values in t are generated uniquely.