The idiom for using Container.Make
is to bind the resulting module and to
explicitly import each of the functions that one wants:
module C = Container.Make (struct ... end)
let count = C.count
let exists = C.exists
let find = C.find
...
This is preferable to:
include Container.Make (struct ... end)
because the include
makes it too easy to shadow specialized implementations of
container functions (length
being a common one).
Container.Make0
is like Container.Make
, but for monomorphic containers like
string
.
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
.