module Data.List import Data.Nat import Data.List1 import Data.Fin import public Data.Zippable %default total ||| Boolean check for whether the list is the empty list. public export isNil : List a -> Bool isNil [] = True isNil _ = False ||| Boolean check for whether the list contains a cons (::) / is non-empty. public export isCons : List a -> Bool isCons [] = False isCons _ = True ||| Add an element to the end of a list. ||| O(n). See the `Data.SnocList` module if you need to perform `snoc` often. public export snoc : List a -> a -> List a snoc xs x = xs ++ [x] ||| Take `n` first elements from `xs`, returning the whole list if ||| `n` >= length `xs`. ||| ||| @ n the number of elements to take ||| @ xs the list to take the elements from public export take : (n : Nat) -> (xs : List a) -> List a take (S k) (x :: xs) = x :: take k xs take _ _ = [] ||| Remove `n` first elements from `xs`, returning the empty list if ||| `n >= length xs` ||| ||| @ n the number of elements to remove ||| @ xs the list to drop the elements from public export drop : (n : Nat) -> (xs : List a) -> List a drop Z xs = xs drop (S n) [] = [] drop (S n) (_::xs) = drop n xs ||| Satisfiable if `k` is a valid index into `xs`. ||| ||| @ k the potential index ||| @ xs the list into which k may be an index public export data InBounds : (k : Nat) -> (xs : List a) -> Type where ||| Z is a valid index into any cons cell InFirst : InBounds Z (x :: xs) ||| Valid indices can be extended InLater : InBounds k xs -> InBounds (S k) (x :: xs) public export Uninhabited (InBounds k []) where uninhabited InFirst impossible uninhabited (InLater _) impossible export Uninhabited (InBounds k xs) => Uninhabited (InBounds (S k) (x::xs)) where uninhabited (InLater y) = uninhabited y ||| Decide whether `k` is a valid index into `xs`. public export inBounds : (k : Nat) -> (xs : List a) -> Dec (InBounds k xs) inBounds _ [] = No uninhabited inBounds Z (_ :: _) = Yes InFirst inBounds (S k) (x :: xs) with (inBounds k xs) inBounds (S k) (x :: xs) | (Yes prf) = Yes (InLater prf) inBounds (S k) (x :: xs) | (No contra) = No $ \(InLater y) => contra y ||| Find a particular element of a list. ||| ||| @ ok a proof that the index is within bounds public export index : (n : Nat) -> (xs : List a) -> {auto 0 ok : InBounds n xs} -> a index Z (x :: xs) {ok = InFirst} = x index (S k) (_ :: xs) {ok = InLater _} = index k xs public export index' : (xs : List a) -> Fin (length xs) -> a index' (x::_) FZ = x index' (_::xs) (FS i) = index' xs i ||| Generate a list by repeatedly applying a partial function until exhausted. ||| @ f the function to iterate ||| @ x the initial value that will be the head of the list covering public export iterate : (f : a -> Maybe a) -> (x : a) -> List a iterate f x = x :: case f x of Nothing => [] Just y => iterate f y ||| Given a function `f` which extracts an element of `b` and `b`'s ||| continuation, return the list consisting of the extracted elements. ||| CAUTION: Only terminates if `f` eventually returns `Nothing`. ||| ||| @ f a function which provides an element of `b` and the rest of `b` ||| @ b a structure contanining any number of elements covering public export unfoldr : (f : b -> Maybe (a, b)) -> b -> List a unfoldr f c = case f c of Nothing => [] Just (a, n) => a :: unfoldr f n ||| Returns the list of elements obtained by applying `f` to `x` `0` to `n-1` times, ||| starting with `x`. ||| ||| @ n the number of times to iterate `f` over `x` ||| @ f a function producing a series ||| @ x the initial element of the series public export iterateN : (n : Nat) -> (f : a -> a) -> (x : a) -> List a iterateN Z _ _ = [] iterateN (S k) f x = x :: iterateN k f (f x) ||| Get the longest prefix of the list that satisfies the predicate. ||| ||| @ p a custom predicate for the elements of the list ||| @ xs the list of elements public export takeWhile : (p : a -> Bool) -> (xs : List a) -> List a takeWhile p [] = [] takeWhile p (x::xs) = if p x then x :: takeWhile p xs else [] ||| Remove elements from the list until an element no longer satisfies the ||| predicate. ||| ||| @ p a custom predicate for the elements of the list ||| @ xs the list of elements to remove from public export dropWhile : (p : a -> Bool) -> (xs : List a) -> List a dropWhile p [] = [] dropWhile p (x::xs) = if p x then dropWhile p xs else x::xs ||| Applied to a predicate and a list, returns the list of those elements that ||| satisfy the predicate. public export filter : (p : a -> Bool) -> List a -> List a filter p [] = [] filter p (x :: xs) = if p x then x :: filter p xs else filter p xs ||| Find the first element of the list that satisfies the predicate. public export find : (p : a -> Bool) -> (xs : List a) -> Maybe a find p [] = Nothing find p (x::xs) = if p x then Just x else find p xs ||| Find the index and proof of InBounds of the first element (if exists) of a ||| list that satisfies the given test, else `Nothing`. public export findIndex : (a -> Bool) -> (xs : List a) -> Maybe $ Fin (length xs) findIndex _ [] = Nothing findIndex p (x :: xs) = if p x then Just FZ else FS <$> findIndex p xs ||| Find indices of all elements that satisfy the given test. public export findIndices : (a -> Bool) -> List a -> List Nat findIndices p = h 0 where h : Nat -> List a -> List Nat h _ [] = [] h lvl (x :: xs) = if p x then lvl :: h (S lvl) xs else h (S lvl) xs ||| Find associated information in a list using a custom comparison. public export lookupBy : (a -> b -> Bool) -> a -> List (b, v) -> Maybe v lookupBy p e [] = Nothing lookupBy p e ((l, r) :: xs) = if p e l then Just r else lookupBy p e xs ||| Find associated information in a list using Boolean equality. public export lookup : Eq a => a -> List (a, b) -> Maybe b lookup = lookupBy (==) ||| Check if something is a member of a list using a custom comparison. public export elemBy : (a -> b -> Bool) -> a -> List b -> Bool elemBy p e [] = False elemBy p e (x::xs) = p e x || elemBy p e xs ||| Remove duplicate elements from a list using a custom comparison. The general ||| case of `nub`. ||| O(n^2). ||| ||| @ p a custom comparison for detecting duplicate elements ||| @ xs the list to remove the duplicates from public export nubBy : (p : a -> a -> Bool) -> (xs : List a) -> List a nubBy = nubBy' [] where nubBy' : List a -> (a -> a -> Bool) -> List a -> List a nubBy' acc p [] = [] nubBy' acc p (x::xs) = if elemBy p x acc then nubBy' acc p xs else x :: nubBy' (x::acc) p xs ||| The nub function removes duplicate elements from a list using ||| boolean equality. In particular, it keeps only the first occurrence of each ||| element. It is a special case of `nubBy`, which allows the programmer to ||| supply their own equality test. ||| O(n^2). ||| ||| ```idris example ||| nub (the (List _) [1,2,1,3]) ||| ``` public export nub : Eq a => List a -> List a nub = nubBy (==) ||| The deleteBy function behaves like delete, but takes a user-supplied equality predicate. public export deleteBy : (a -> b -> Bool) -> a -> List b -> List b deleteBy _ _ [] = [] deleteBy eq x (y::ys) = if x `eq` y then ys else y :: deleteBy eq x ys ||| `delete x` removes the first occurrence of `x` from its list argument. For ||| example, ||| |||````idris example |||delete 'a' ['b', 'a', 'n', 'a', 'n', 'a'] |||```` ||| ||| It is a special case of deleteBy, which allows the programmer to supply ||| their own equality test. public export delete : Eq a => a -> List a -> List a delete = deleteBy (==) ||| Delete the first occurrence of each element from the second list in the first ||| list where equality is determined by the predicate passed as the first argument. ||| @ p A function that returns true when its two arguments should be considered equal. ||| @ source The list to delete elements from. ||| @ undesirables The list of elements to delete. public export deleteFirstsBy : (p : a -> b -> Bool) -> (source : List b) -> (undesirables : List a) -> List b deleteFirstsBy p = foldl (flip (deleteBy p)) infix 7 \\ ||| The non-associative list-difference. ||| A specialized form of @deleteFirstsBy@ where the predicate is equality under the @Eq@ ||| interface. ||| Deletes the first occurrence of each element of the second list from the first list. ||| ||| In the following example, the result is `[2, 4]`. ||| ```idris example ||| [1, 2, 3, 4] // [1, 3] ||| ``` ||| public export (\\) : Eq a => List a -> List a -> List a (\\) = foldl (flip delete) ||| The unionBy function returns the union of two lists by user-supplied equality predicate. public export unionBy : (a -> a -> Bool) -> List a -> List a -> List a unionBy eq xs ys = xs ++ foldl (flip (deleteBy eq)) (nubBy eq ys) xs ||| Compute the union of two lists according to their `Eq` implementation. ||| ||| ```idris example ||| union ['d', 'o', 'g'] ['c', 'o', 'w'] ||| ``` ||| public export union : Eq a => List a -> List a -> List a union = unionBy (==) ||| Like @span@ but using a predicate that might convert a to b, i.e. given a ||| predicate from a to Maybe b and a list of as, returns a tuple consisting of ||| the longest prefix of the list where a -> Just b, and the rest of the list. public export spanBy : (a -> Maybe b) -> List a -> (List b, List a) spanBy p [] = ([], []) spanBy p (x :: xs) = case p x of Nothing => ([], x :: xs) Just y => let (ys, zs) = spanBy p xs in (y :: ys, zs) ||| Given a predicate and a list, returns a tuple consisting of the longest ||| prefix of the list whose elements satisfy the predicate, and the rest of the ||| list. public export span : (a -> Bool) -> List a -> (List a, List a) span p [] = ([], []) span p (x::xs) = if p x then let (ys, zs) = span p xs in (x::ys, zs) else ([], x::xs) ||| Similar to `span` but negates the predicate, i.e.: returns a tuple ||| consisting of the longest prefix of the list whose elements don't satisfy ||| the predicate, and the rest of the list. public export break : (a -> Bool) -> List a -> (List a, List a) break p xs = span (not . p) xs public export singleton : a -> List a singleton x = [x] public export split : (a -> Bool) -> List a -> List1 (List a) split p xs = case break p xs of (chunk, []) => singleton chunk (chunk, (c :: rest)) => chunk ::: forget (split p (assert_smaller xs rest)) ||| Split the list `xs` at the index `n`. If `n > length xs`, returns a tuple ||| consisting of `xs` and `[]`. ||| ||| @ n the index to split the list at ||| @ xs the list to split public export splitAt : (n : Nat) -> (xs : List a) -> (List a, List a) splitAt Z xs = ([], xs) splitAt (S k) [] = ([], []) splitAt (S k) (x :: xs) = let (tk, dr) = splitAt k xs in (x :: tk, dr) ||| Divide the list into a tuple containing two smaller lists: one with the ||| elements that satisfies the given predicate and another with the elements ||| that don't. ||| ||| @ p the predicate to partition according to ||| @ xs the list to partition public export partition : (p : a -> Bool) -> (xs : List a) -> (List a, List a) partition p [] = ([], []) partition p (x::xs) = let (lefts, rights) = partition p xs in if p x then (x::lefts, rights) else (lefts, x::rights) ||| The inits function returns all initial segments of the argument, shortest ||| first. For example, ||| ||| ```idris example ||| inits [1,2,3] ||| ``` public export inits : List a -> List (List a) inits xs = [] :: case xs of [] => [] x :: xs' => map (x ::) (inits xs') ||| The tails function returns all final segments of the argument, longest ||| first. For example, ||| ||| ```idris example ||| tails [1,2,3] == [[1,2,3], [2,3], [3], []] |||``` public export tails : List a -> List (List a) tails xs = xs :: case xs of [] => [] _ :: xs' => tails xs' ||| Split on the given element. ||| ||| ```idris example ||| splitOn 0 [1,0,2,0,0,3] ||| ``` ||| public export splitOn : Eq a => a -> List a -> List1 (List a) splitOn a = split (== a) ||| Replace the elements in the list that satisfy the predicate with the given ||| value. The general case of `replaceOn`. ||| ||| @ p the predicate to replace elements in the list according to ||| @ b the element to replace with ||| @ l the list to perform the replacements on public export replaceWhen : (p : a -> Bool) -> (b : a) -> (l : List a) -> List a replaceWhen p b l = map (\c => if p c then b else c) l ||| Replace the elements in the list that are equal to `e`, using boolean ||| equality, with `b`. A special case of `replaceWhen`, using `== e` as the ||| predicate. ||| ||| ```idris example ||| > replaceOn '-' ',' ['1', '-', '2', '-', '3'] ||| ['1', ',', '2', ',', '3'] ||| ``` ||| ||| @ e the element to find and replace ||| @ b the element to replace with ||| @ l the list to perform the replacements on public export replaceOn : Eq a => (e : a) -> (b : a) -> (l : List a) -> List a replaceOn e = replaceWhen (== e) ||| Construct a list with `n` copies of `x`. ||| ||| @ n how many copies ||| @ x the element to replicate public export replicate : (n : Nat) -> (x : a) -> List a replicate Z _ = [] replicate (S n) x = x :: replicate n x ||| Compute the intersect of two lists by user-supplied equality predicate. export intersectBy : (a -> a -> Bool) -> List a -> List a -> List a intersectBy eq xs ys = [x | x <- xs, any (eq x) ys] ||| Compute the intersection of two lists according to the `Eq` implementation for ||| the elements. export intersect : Eq a => List a -> List a -> List a intersect = intersectBy (==) ||| Compute the intersect of all the lists in the given list of lists, according ||| to the user-supplied equality predicate. ||| ||| @ eq the predicate for computing the intersection ||| @ ls the list of lists to compute the intersect of export intersectAllBy : (eq : a -> a -> Bool) -> (ls : List (List a)) -> List a intersectAllBy eq [] = [] intersectAllBy eq (xs :: xss) = filter (\x => all (elemBy eq x) xss) xs ||| Compute the intersect of all the lists in the given list of lists, according ||| to boolean equality. A special case of `intersectAllBy`, using `==` as the ||| equality predicate. ||| ||| @ ls the list of lists to compute the intersect of export intersectAll : Eq a => (ls : List (List a)) -> List a intersectAll = intersectAllBy (==) --------------------------- -- Zippable -- --------------------------- public export Zippable List where zipWith _ [] _ = [] zipWith _ _ [] = [] zipWith f (x :: xs) (y :: ys) = f x y :: zipWith f xs ys zipWith3 _ [] _ _ = [] zipWith3 _ _ [] _ = [] zipWith3 _ _ _ [] = [] zipWith3 f (x :: xs) (y :: ys) (z :: zs) = f x y z :: zipWith3 f xs ys zs unzipWith f [] = ([], []) unzipWith f (x :: xs) = let (b, c) = f x (bs, cs) = unzipWith f xs in (b :: bs, c :: cs) unzipWith3 f [] = ([], [], []) unzipWith3 f (x :: xs) = let (b, c, d) = f x (bs, cs, ds) = unzipWith3 f xs in (b :: bs, c :: cs, d :: ds) --------------------------- -- Non-empty List --------------------------- ||| Proof that a given list is non-empty. public export data NonEmpty : (xs : List a) -> Type where IsNonEmpty : NonEmpty (x :: xs) -- The empty list (Nil) cannot be `NonEmpty`. export Uninhabited (NonEmpty []) where uninhabited IsNonEmpty impossible ||| Get the head of a non-empty list. ||| @ ok proof the list is non-empty public export head : (l : List a) -> {auto 0 ok : NonEmpty l} -> a head [] impossible head (x :: _) = x ||| Get the tail of a non-empty list. ||| @ ok proof the list is non-empty public export tail : (l : List a) -> {auto 0 ok : NonEmpty l} -> List a tail [] impossible tail (_ :: xs) = xs ||| Retrieve the last element of a non-empty list. ||| @ ok proof that the list is non-empty public export last : (l : List a) -> {auto 0 ok : NonEmpty l} -> a last [] impossible last [x] = x last (x :: xs@(_::_)) = last xs ||| Return all but the last element of a non-empty list. ||| @ ok proof the list is non-empty public export init : (l : List a) -> {auto 0 ok : NonEmpty l} -> List a init [] impossible init [x] = [] init (x :: xs@(_::_)) = x :: init xs ||| Attempt to get the head of a list. If the list is empty, return `Nothing`. public export head' : List a -> Maybe a head' [] = Nothing head' (x::_) = Just x ||| Attempt to get the tail of a list. If the list is empty, return `Nothing`. export tail' : List a -> Maybe (List a) tail' [] = Nothing tail' (_::xs) = Just xs ||| Attempt to retrieve the last element of a non-empty list. ||| ||| If the list is empty, return `Nothing`. export last' : List a -> Maybe a last' [] = Nothing last' xs@(_::_) = Just (last xs) ||| Attempt to return all but the last element of a non-empty list. ||| ||| If the list is empty, return `Nothing`. export init' : List a -> Maybe (List a) init' [] = Nothing init' xs@(_::_) = Just (init xs) ||| Foldr a non-empty list, using `map` to transform the first accumulated ||| element to something of the desired type and `func` to accumulate the ||| elements. ||| ||| @ func the function used to accumulate the elements ||| @ map an initial transformation from the element to the accumulated type ||| @ l the non-empty list to foldr ||| @ ok proof that the list is non-empty public export foldr1By : (func : a -> b -> b) -> (map : a -> b) -> (l : List a) -> {auto 0 ok : NonEmpty l} -> b foldr1By f map [] impossible foldr1By f map [x] = map x foldr1By f map (x :: xs@(_::_)) = f x (foldr1By f map xs) ||| Foldl a non-empty list, using `map` to transform the first accumulated ||| element to something of the desired type and `func` to accumulate the ||| elements. ||| ||| @ func the function used to accumulate the elements ||| @ map an initial transformation from the element to the accumulated type ||| @ l the non-empty list to foldl ||| @ ok proof that the list is non-empty public export foldl1By : (func : b -> a -> b) -> (map : a -> b) -> (l : List a) -> {auto 0 ok : NonEmpty l} -> b foldl1By f map [] impossible foldl1By f map (x::xs) = foldl f (map x) xs ||| Foldr a non-empty list without seeding the accumulator. ||| ||| @ ok proof that the list is non-empty public export foldr1 : (a -> a -> a) -> (l : List a) -> {auto 0 ok : NonEmpty l} -> a foldr1 f xs = foldr1By f id xs ||| Foldl a non-empty list without seeding the accumulator. ||| ||| @ ok proof that the list is non-empty public export foldl1 : (a -> a -> a) -> (l : List a) -> {auto 0 ok : NonEmpty l} -> a foldl1 f xs = foldl1By f id xs ||| Convert to a non-empty list. ||| ||| @ ok proof the list is non-empty export toList1 : (l : List a) -> {auto 0 ok : NonEmpty l} -> List1 a toList1 [] impossible toList1 (x :: xs) = x ::: xs ||| Convert to a non-empty list, returning Nothing if the list is empty. public export toList1' : (l : List a) -> Maybe (List1 a) toList1' [] = Nothing toList1' (x :: xs) = Just (x ::: xs) ||| Prefix every element in the list with the given element. ||| ||| @ sep the value to prefix ||| @ xs the list of elements to prefix with the given element ||| ||| ```idris example ||| > with List (mergeReplicate '>' ['a', 'b', 'c', 'd', 'e']) ||| ['>', 'a', '>', 'b', '>', 'c', '>', 'd', '>', 'e'] ||| ``` export mergeReplicate : (sep : a) -> (xs : List a) -> List a mergeReplicate sep [] = [] mergeReplicate sep (y::ys) = sep :: y :: mergeReplicate sep ys ||| Insert some separator between the elements of a list. ||| ||| @ sep the value to intersperse ||| @ xs the list of elements to intersperse with the separator ||| ||| ```idris example ||| > with List (intersperse ',' ['a', 'b', 'c', 'd', 'e']) ||| ['a', ',', 'b', ',', 'c', ',', 'd', ',', 'e'] ||| ``` export intersperse : (sep : a) -> (xs : List a) -> List a intersperse sep [] = [] intersperse sep (x::xs) = x :: mergeReplicate sep xs ||| Given a separator list and some more lists, produce a new list by ||| placing the separator between each of the lists. ||| ||| @ sep the separator ||| @ xss the lists between which the separator will be placed ||| ||| ```idris example ||| intercalate [0, 0, 0] [ [1, 2, 3], [4, 5, 6], [7, 8, 9] ] ||| ``` export intercalate : (sep : List a) -> (xss : List (List a)) -> List a intercalate sep xss = concat $ intersperse sep xss ||| Apply a partial function to the elements of a list, keeping the ones at which ||| it is defined. public export mapMaybe : (a -> Maybe b) -> List a -> List b mapMaybe f [] = [] mapMaybe f (x::xs) = case f x of Nothing => mapMaybe f xs Just j => j :: mapMaybe f xs ||| Extract all of the values contained in a List of Maybes public export catMaybes : List (Maybe a) -> List a catMaybes = mapMaybe id -------------------------------------------------------------------------------- -- Sorting -------------------------------------------------------------------------------- ||| Check whether a list is sorted with respect to the default ordering for the type of its elements. export sorted : Ord a => List a -> Bool sorted (x :: xs @ (y :: _)) = x <= y && sorted xs sorted _ = True ||| Merge two sorted lists using an arbitrary comparison ||| predicate. Note that the lists must have been sorted using this ||| predicate already. export mergeBy : (a -> a -> Ordering) -> List a -> List a -> List a mergeBy order [] right = right mergeBy order left [] = left mergeBy order (x::xs) (y::ys) = -- The code below will emit `y` before `x` whenever `x == y`. -- If you change this, `sortBy` will stop being stable, unless you fix `sortBy`, too. case order x y of LT => x :: mergeBy order xs (y::ys) _ => y :: mergeBy order (x::xs) ys ||| Merge two sorted lists using the default ordering for the type of their elements. export merge : Ord a => List a -> List a -> List a merge left right = mergeBy compare left right ||| Sort a list using some arbitrary comparison predicate. ||| ||| @ cmp how to compare elements ||| @ xs the list to sort export sortBy : (cmp : a -> a -> Ordering) -> (xs : List a) -> List a sortBy cmp [] = [] sortBy cmp [x] = [x] sortBy cmp xs = let (x, y) = split xs in mergeBy cmp (sortBy cmp (assert_smaller xs x)) (sortBy cmp (assert_smaller xs y)) -- not structurally smaller, hence assert where splitRec : List b -> List a -> (List a -> List a) -> (List a, List a) splitRec (_::_::xs) (y::ys) zs = splitRec xs ys (zs . ((::) y)) splitRec _ ys zs = (ys, zs []) -- In the above base-case clause, we put `ys` on the LHS to get a stable sort. -- This is because `mergeBy` prefers taking elements from its RHS operand -- if both heads are equal, and all elements in `zs []` precede all elements of `ys` -- in the original list. split : List a -> (List a, List a) split xs = splitRec xs xs id ||| Sort a list using the default ordering for the type of its elements. export sort : Ord a => List a -> List a sort = sortBy compare ||| Check whether the `left` list is a prefix of the `right` one, using the ||| provided equality function to compare elements. ||| ||| @ eq a custom equality function for comparing the elements ||| @ left the list which might be a prefix of `right` ||| @ right the list of elements to compare againts export isPrefixOfBy : (eq : a -> b -> Bool) -> (left : List a) -> (right : List b) -> Bool isPrefixOfBy p [] _ = True isPrefixOfBy p _ [] = False isPrefixOfBy p (x::xs) (y::ys) = p x y && isPrefixOfBy p xs ys ||| The isPrefixOf function takes two lists and returns True iff the first list ||| is a prefix of the second when comparing elements using `==`. export isPrefixOf : Eq a => List a -> List a -> Bool isPrefixOf = isPrefixOfBy (==) ||| Check whether the `left` is a suffix of the `right` one, using the provided ||| equality function to compare elements. ||| ||| @ eq a custom equality function for comparing the elements ||| @ left the list which might be a suffix of `right` ||| @ right the list of elements to compare againts export isSuffixOfBy : (eq : a -> b -> Bool) -> (left : List a) -> (right : List b) -> Bool isSuffixOfBy p left right = isPrefixOfBy p (reverse left) (reverse right) ||| The isSuffixOf function takes two lists and returns True iff the first list ||| is a suffix of the second when comparing elements using `==`. export isSuffixOf : Eq a => List a -> List a -> Bool isSuffixOf = isSuffixOfBy (==) ||| The isInfixOf function takes two lists and returns True iff the first list ||| is contained, wholly and intact, anywhere within the second. ||| ||| ```idris example ||| isInfixOf ['b','c'] ['a', 'b', 'c', 'd'] ||| ``` ||| ```idris example ||| isInfixOf ['b','d'] ['a', 'b', 'c', 'd'] ||| ``` ||| export isInfixOf : Eq a => List a -> List a -> Bool isInfixOf n h = any (isPrefixOf n) (tails h) ||| Transposes rows and columns of a list of lists. ||| ||| ```idris example ||| with List transpose [[1, 2], [3, 4]] ||| ``` ||| ||| This also works for non square scenarios, thus ||| involution does not always hold: ||| ||| transpose [[], [1, 2]] = [[1], [2]] ||| transpose (transpose [[], [1, 2]]) = [[1, 2]] export transpose : List (List a) -> List (List a) transpose [] = [] transpose (heads :: tails) = spreadHeads heads (transpose tails) where spreadHeads : List a -> List (List a) -> List (List a) spreadHeads [] tails = tails spreadHeads (head :: heads) [] = [head] :: spreadHeads heads [] spreadHeads (head :: heads) (tail :: tails) = (head :: tail) :: spreadHeads heads tails ------------------------------------------------------------------------ -- Grouping ------------------------------------------------------------------------ ||| `groupBy` operates like `group`, but uses the provided equality ||| predicate instead of `==`. public export groupBy : (a -> a -> Bool) -> List a -> List (List1 a) groupBy _ [] = [] groupBy eq (h :: t) = let (ys,zs) = go h t in ys :: zs where go : a -> List a -> (List1 a, List (List1 a)) go v [] = (singleton v,[]) go v (x :: xs) = let (ys,zs) = go x xs in if eq v x then (cons v ys, zs) else (singleton v, ys :: zs) ||| The `group` function takes a list of values and returns a list of ||| lists such that flattening the resulting list is equal to the ||| argument. Moreover, each list in the resulting list ||| contains only equal elements. public export group : Eq a => List a -> List (List1 a) group = groupBy (==) ||| `groupWith` operates like `group`, but uses the provided projection when ||| comparing for equality public export groupWith : Eq b => (a -> b) -> List a -> List (List1 a) groupWith f = groupBy (\x,y => f x == f y) ||| `groupAllWith` operates like `groupWith`, but sorts the list ||| first so that each equivalence class has, at most, one list in the ||| output public export groupAllWith : Ord b => (a -> b) -> List a -> List (List1 a) groupAllWith f = groupWith f . sortBy (comparing f) -------------------------------------------------------------------------------- -- Properties -------------------------------------------------------------------------------- -- Nil is not Cons export Uninhabited ([] = x :: xs) where uninhabited Refl impossible -- Cons is not Nil export Uninhabited (x :: xs = []) where uninhabited Refl impossible -- If the heads or the tails of two lists are provably non-equal, then the -- combination of the respective heads with their respective tails must be -- provably non-equal. export {0 xs : List a} -> Either (Uninhabited $ x === y) (Uninhabited $ xs === ys) => Uninhabited (x::xs = y::ys) where uninhabited @{Left z} Refl = uninhabited @{z} Refl uninhabited @{Right z} Refl = uninhabited @{z} Refl ||| (::) is injective export consInjective : forall x, xs, y, ys . the (List a) (x :: xs) = the (List b) (y :: ys) -> (x = y, xs = ys) consInjective Refl = (Refl, Refl) ||| List `reverse` applied to `reverseOnto` is equivalent to swapping the ||| arguments of `reverseOnto`. reverseReverseOnto : (l, r : List a) -> reverse (reverseOnto l r) = reverseOnto r l reverseReverseOnto _ [] = Refl reverseReverseOnto l (x :: xs) = reverseReverseOnto (x :: l) xs ||| List `reverse` applied twice yields the identity function. export reverseInvolutive : (xs : List a) -> reverse (reverse xs) = xs reverseInvolutive = reverseReverseOnto [] ||| Appending `x` to `l` and then reversing the result onto `r` is the same as ||| using (::) with `x` and the result of reversing `l` onto `r`. consReverse : (x : a) -> (l, r : List a) -> x :: reverseOnto r l = reverseOnto r (reverseOnto [x] (reverse l)) consReverse _ [] _ = Refl consReverse x (y::ys) r = rewrite consReverse x ys (y :: r) in rewrite cong (reverseOnto r . reverse) $ consReverse x ys [y] in rewrite reverseInvolutive (y :: reverseOnto [x] (reverse ys)) in Refl ||| Proof that it is safe to lift a (::) out of the first `tailRecAppend` ||| argument. consTailRecAppend : (x : a) -> (l, r : List a) -> tailRecAppend (x :: l) r = x :: (tailRecAppend l r) consTailRecAppend x l r = rewrite consReverse x (reverse l) r in rewrite reverseInvolutive l in Refl ||| Proof that `(++)` and `tailRecAppend` do the same thing, so the %transform ||| directive is safe. tailRecAppendIsAppend : (xs, ys : List a) -> tailRecAppend xs ys = xs ++ ys tailRecAppendIsAppend [] ys = Refl tailRecAppendIsAppend (x::xs) ys = trans (consTailRecAppend x xs ys) (cong (x ::) $ tailRecAppendIsAppend xs ys) ||| The empty list is a right identity for append. export appendNilRightNeutral : (l : List a) -> l ++ [] = l appendNilRightNeutral [] = Refl appendNilRightNeutral (_::xs) = rewrite appendNilRightNeutral xs in Refl ||| Appending lists is associative. export appendAssociative : (l, c, r : List a) -> l ++ (c ++ r) = (l ++ c) ++ r appendAssociative [] c r = Refl appendAssociative (_::xs) c r = rewrite appendAssociative xs c r in Refl ||| `reverseOnto` reverses the list and prepends it to the "onto" argument revOnto : (xs, vs : List a) -> reverseOnto xs vs = reverse vs ++ xs revOnto _ [] = Refl revOnto xs (v :: vs) = rewrite revOnto (v :: xs) vs in rewrite appendAssociative (reverse vs) [v] xs in rewrite revOnto [v] vs in Refl ||| `reverse` is distributive export revAppend : (vs, ns : List a) -> reverse ns ++ reverse vs = reverse (vs ++ ns) revAppend [] ns = rewrite appendNilRightNeutral (reverse ns) in Refl revAppend (v :: vs) ns = rewrite revOnto [v] vs in rewrite revOnto [v] (vs ++ ns) in rewrite sym (revAppend vs ns) in rewrite appendAssociative (reverse ns) (reverse vs) [v] in Refl ||| Dropping `m` elements from `l` and then dropping `n` elements from the ||| result, is the same as simply dropping `n+m` elements from `l` export dropFusion : (n, m : Nat) -> (l : List t) -> drop n (drop m l) = drop (n+m) l dropFusion Z m l = Refl dropFusion (S n) Z l = rewrite plusZeroRightNeutral n in Refl dropFusion (S n) (S m) [] = Refl dropFusion (S n) (S m) (x::l) = rewrite plusAssociative n 1 m in rewrite plusCommutative n 1 in dropFusion (S n) m l ||| Mapping a function over a list does not change the length of the list. export lengthMap : (xs : List a) -> length (map f xs) = length xs lengthMap [] = Refl lengthMap (x :: xs) = cong S (lengthMap xs)