A modern list api for Emacs. No 'cl required.
It's available on marmalade and Melpa:
M-x package-install dash
Or you can just dump dash.el
in your load
path somewhere.
If you want the function combinators, then also:
M-x package-install dash-functional
Add this to the big comment block at the top:
;; Package-Requires: ((dash "2.14.1"))
To get function combinators:
;; Package-Requires: ((dash "2.14.1") (dash-functional "1.2.0") (emacs "24"))
- For backward compatibility reasons
-zip
return a cons-cell instead of a list with two elements when called on two lists. This is a clunky API, and in an upcoming 3.0 release of Dash it will always return a list. If you rely on the cons-cell return value, use-zip-pair
instead.
Font lock of dash functions in emacs lisp buffers is now optional. Include this in your emacs settings to get syntax highlighting:
(eval-after-load 'dash '(dash-enable-font-lock))
All functions and constructs in the library are prefixed with a dash (-).
There are also anaphoric versions of functions where that makes sense, prefixed with two dashes instead of one.
While -map
takes a function to map over the list, you can also use
the anaphoric form with double dashes - which will then be executed
with it
exposed as the list item. Here's an example:
(-map (lambda (n) (* n n)) '(1 2 3 4)) ;; normal version
(--map (* it it) '(1 2 3 4)) ;; anaphoric version
of course the original can also be written like
(defun square (n) (* n n))
(-map 'square '(1 2 3 4))
which demonstrates the usefulness of both versions.
Functions in this category take a transforming function, which is then applied sequentially to each or selected elements of the input list. The results are collected in order and returned as new list.
- -map
(fn list)
- -map-when
(pred rep list)
- -map-first
(pred rep list)
- -map-last
(pred rep list)
- -map-indexed
(fn list)
- -annotate
(fn list)
- -splice
(pred fun list)
- -splice-list
(pred new-list list)
- -mapcat
(fn list)
- -copy
(arg)
Functions returning a sublist of the original list.
- -filter
(pred list)
- -remove
(pred list)
- -remove-first
(pred list)
- -remove-last
(pred list)
- -remove-item
(item list)
- -non-nil
(list)
- -slice
(list from &optional to step)
- -take
(n list)
- -take-last
(n list)
- -drop
(n list)
- -drop-last
(n list)
- -take-while
(pred list)
- -drop-while
(pred list)
- -select-by-indices
(indices list)
- -select-columns
(columns table)
- -select-column
(column table)
Functions returning a modified copy of the input list.
- -keep
(fn list)
- -concat
(&rest lists)
- -flatten
(l)
- -flatten-n
(num list)
- -replace
(old new list)
- -replace-first
(old new list)
- -replace-last
(old new list)
- -insert-at
(n x list)
- -replace-at
(n x list)
- -update-at
(n func list)
- -remove-at
(n list)
- -remove-at-indices
(indices list)
Functions reducing lists into single value.
- -reduce-from
(fn initial-value list)
- -reduce-r-from
(fn initial-value list)
- -reduce
(fn list)
- -reduce-r
(fn list)
- -reductions-from
(fn init list)
- -reductions-r-from
(fn init list)
- -reductions
(fn list)
- -reductions-r
(fn list)
- -count
(pred list)
- -sum
(list)
- -running-sum
(list)
- -product
(list)
- -running-product
(list)
- -inits
(list)
- -tails
(list)
- -common-prefix
(&rest lists)
- -min
(list)
- -min-by
(comparator list)
- -max
(list)
- -max-by
(comparator list)
Operations dual to reductions, building lists from seed value rather than consuming a list to produce a single value.
- -any?
(pred list)
- -all?
(pred list)
- -none?
(pred list)
- -only-some?
(pred list)
- -contains?
(list element)
- -same-items?
(list list2)
- -is-prefix?
(prefix list)
- -is-suffix?
(suffix list)
- -is-infix?
(infix list)
Functions partitioning the input list into a list of lists.
- -split-at
(n list)
- -split-with
(pred list)
- -split-on
(item list)
- -split-when
(fn list)
- -separate
(pred list)
- -partition
(n list)
- -partition-all
(n list)
- -partition-in-steps
(n step list)
- -partition-all-in-steps
(n step list)
- -partition-by
(fn list)
- -partition-by-header
(fn list)
- -partition-after-pred
(pred list)
- -partition-before-pred
(pred list)
- -partition-before-item
(item list)
- -partition-after-item
(item list)
- -group-by
(fn list)
Return indices of elements based on predicates, sort elements by indices etc.
- -elem-index
(elem list)
- -elem-indices
(elem list)
- -find-index
(pred list)
- -find-last-index
(pred list)
- -find-indices
(pred list)
- -grade-up
(comparator list)
- -grade-down
(comparator list)
Operations pretending lists are sets.
- -union
(list list2)
- -difference
(list list2)
- -intersection
(list list2)
- -powerset
(list)
- -permutations
(list)
- -distinct
(list)
Other list functions not fit to be classified elsewhere.
- -rotate
(n list)
- -repeat
(n x)
- -cons*
(&rest args)
- -snoc
(list elem &rest elements)
- -interpose
(sep list)
- -interleave
(&rest lists)
- -zip-with
(fn list1 list2)
- -zip
(&rest lists)
- -zip-fill
(fill-value &rest lists)
- -unzip
(lists)
- -cycle
(list)
- -pad
(fill-value &rest lists)
- -table
(fn &rest lists)
- -table-flat
(fn &rest lists)
- -first
(pred list)
- -some
(pred list)
- -last
(pred list)
- -first-item
(list)
- -second-item
(arg1)
- -third-item
(arg1)
- -fourth-item
(list)
- -fifth-item
(list)
- -last-item
(list)
- -butlast
(list)
- -sort
(comparator list)
- -list
(&rest args)
- -fix
(fn list)
Functions pretending lists are trees.
- -tree-seq
(branch children tree)
- -tree-map
(fn tree)
- -tree-map-nodes
(pred fun tree)
- -tree-reduce
(fn tree)
- -tree-reduce-from
(fn init-value tree)
- -tree-mapreduce
(fn folder tree)
- -tree-mapreduce-from
(fn folder init-value tree)
- -clone
(list)
- ->
(x &optional form &rest more)
- ->>
(x &optional form &rest more)
- -->
(x &rest forms)
- -as->
(value variable &rest forms)
- -some->
(x &optional form &rest more)
- -some->>
(x &optional form &rest more)
- -some-->
(x &optional form &rest more)
Convenient versions of let
and let*
constructs combined with flow control.
- -when-let
(var-val &rest body)
- -when-let*
(vars-vals &rest body)
- -if-let
(var-val then &rest else)
- -if-let*
(vars-vals then &rest else)
- -let
(varlist &rest body)
- -let*
(varlist &rest body)
- -lambda
(match-form &rest body)
Functions iterating over lists for side-effect only.
- -each
(list fn)
- -each-while
(list pred fn)
- -each-indexed
(list fn)
- -dotimes
(num fn)
- -doto
(eval-initial-value &rest forms)
These combinators require Emacs 24 for its lexical scope. So they are offered in a separate package: dash-functional
.
- -partial
(fn &rest args)
- -rpartial
(fn &rest args)
- -juxt
(&rest fns)
- -compose
(&rest fns)
- -appli
17AE
fy
(fn)
- -on
(operator transformer)
- -flip
(func)
- -const
(c)
- -cut
(&rest params)
- -not
(pred)
- -orfn
(&rest preds)
- -andfn
(&rest preds)
- -iteratefn
(fn n)
- -fixfn
(fn &optional equal-test halt-test)
- -prodfn
(&rest fns)
Functions in this category take a transforming function, which is then applied sequentially to each or selected elements of the input list. The results are collected in order and returned as new list.
Return a new list consisting of the result of applying fn
to the items in list
.
(-map (lambda (num) (* num num)) '(1 2 3 4)) ;; => '(1 4 9 16)
(-map 'square '(1 2 3 4)) ;; => '(1 4 9 16)
(--map (* it it) '(1 2 3 4)) ;; => '(1 4 9 16)
Return a new list where the elements in list
that do not match the pred
function
are unchanged, and where the elements in list
that do match the pred
function are mapped
through the rep
function.
Alias: -replace-where
See also: -update-at
(-map-when 'even? 'square '(1 2 3 4)) ;; => '(1 4 3 16)
(--map-when (> it 2) (* it it) '(1 2 3 4)) ;; => '(1 2 9 16)
(--map-when (= it 2) 17 '(1 2 3 4)) ;; => '(1 17 3 4)
Replace first item in list
satisfying pred
with result of rep
called on this item.
See also: -map-when
, -replace-first
(-map-first 'even? 'square '(1 2 3 4)) ;; => '(1 4 3 4)
(--map-first (> it 2) (* it it) '(1 2 3 4)) ;; => '(1 2 9 4)
(--map-first (= it 2) 17 '(1 2 3 2)) ;; => '(1 17 3 2)
Replace last item in list
satisfying pred
with result of rep
called on this item.
See also: -map-when
, -replace-last
(-map-last 'even? 'square '(1 2 3 4)) ;; => '(1 2 3 16)
(--map-last (> it 2) (* it it) '(1 2 3 4)) ;; => '(1 2 3 16)
(--map-last (= it 2) 17 '(1 2 3 2)) ;; => '(1 2 3 17)
Return a new list consisting of the result of (fn
index item) for each item in list
.
In the anaphoric form --map-indexed
, the index is exposed as symbol it-index
.
See also: -each-indexed
.
(-map-indexed (lambda (index item) (- item index)) '(1 2 3 4)) ;; => '(1 1 1 1)
(--map-indexed (- it it-index) '(1 2 3 4)) ;; => '(1 1 1 1)
Return a list of cons cells where each cell is fn
applied to each
element of list
paired with the unmodified element of list
.
(-annotate '1+ '(1 2 3)) ;; => '((2 . 1) (3 . 2) (4 . 3))
(-annotate 'length '(("h" "e" "l" "l" "o") ("hello" "world"))) ;; => '((5 "h" "e" "l" "l" "o") (2 "hello" "world"))
(--annotate (< 1 it) '(0 1 2 3)) ;; => '((nil . 0) (nil . 1) (t . 2) (t . 3))
Splice lists generated by fun
in place of elements matching pred
in list
.
fun
takes the element matching pred
as input.
This function can be used as replacement for ,@
in case you
need to splice several lists at marked positions (for example
with keywords).
See also: -splice-list
, -insert-at
(-splice 'even? (lambda (x) (list x x)) '(1 2 3 4)) ;; => '(1 2 2 3 4 4)
(--splice 't (list it it) '(1 2 3 4)) ;; => '(1 1 2 2 3 3 4 4)
(--splice (equal it :magic) '((list of) (magical) (code)) '((foo) (bar) :magic (baz))) ;; => '((foo) (bar) (list of) (magical) (code) (baz))
Splice new-list
in place of elements matching pred
in list
.
See also: -splice
, -insert-at
(-splice-list 'keywordp '(a b c) '(1 :foo 2)) ;; => '(1 a b c 2)
(-splice-list 'keywordp nil '(1 :foo 2)) ;; => '(1 2)
(--splice-list (keywordp it) '(a b c) '(1 :foo 2)) ;; => '(1 a b c 2)
Return the concatenation of the result of mapping fn
over list
.
Thus function fn
should return a list.
(-mapcat 'list '(1 2 3)) ;; => '(1 2 3)
(-mapcat (lambda (item) (list 0 item)) '(1 2 3)) ;; => '(0 1 0 2 0 3)
(--mapcat (list 0 it) '(1 2 3)) ;; => '(0 1 0 2 0 3)
Create a shallow copy of list
.
(fn list
)
(-copy '(1 2 3)) ;; => '(1 2 3)
(let ((a '(1 2 3))) (eq a (-copy a))) ;; => nil
Functions returning a sublist of the original list.
Return a new list of the items in list
for which pred
returns a non-nil value.
Alias: -select
(-filter (lambda (num) (= 0 (% num 2))) '(1 2 3 4)) ;; => '(2 4)
(-filter 'even? '(1 2 3 4)) ;; => '(2 4)
(--filter (= 0 (% it 2)) '(1 2 3 4)) ;; => '(2 4)
Return a new list of the items in list
for which pred
returns nil.
Alias: -reject
See also: -filter
.
(-remove (lambda (num) (= 0 (% num 2))) '(1 2 3 4)) ;; => '(1 3)
(-remove 'even? '(1 2 3 4)) ;; => '(1 3)
(--remove (= 0 (% it 2)) '(1 2 3 4)) ;; => '(1 3)
Return a new list with the first item matching pred
removed.
Alias: -reject-first
See also: -remove
, -map-first
(-remove-first 'even? '(1 3 5 4 7 8 10)) ;; => '(1 3 5 7 8 10)
(-remove-first 'stringp '(1 2 "first" "second" "third")) ;; => '(1 2 "second" "third")
(--remove-first (> it 3) '(1 2 3 4 5 6 7 8 9 10)) ;; => '(1 2 3 5 6 7 8 9 10)
Return a new list with the last item matching pred
removed.
Alias: -reject-last
(-remove-last 'even? '(1 3 5 4 7 8 10 11)) ;; => '(1 3 5 4 7 8 11)
(-remove-last 'stringp '(1 2 "last" "second" "third")) ;; => '(1 2 "last" "second")
(--remove-last (> it 3) '(1 2 3 4 5 6 7 8 9 10)) ;; => '(1 2 3 4 5 6 7 8 9)
Remove all occurences of item
from list
.
Comparison is done with equal
.
(-remove-item 3 '(1 2 3 2 3 4 5 3)) ;; => '(1 2 2 4 5)
(-remove-item 'foo '(foo bar baz foo)) ;; => '(bar baz)
(-remove-item "bob" '("alice" "bob" "eve" "bob" "dave")) ;; => '("alice" "eve" "dave")
Return all non-nil elements of list
.
(-non-nil '(1 nil 2 nil nil 3 4 nil 5 nil)) ;; => '(1 2 3 4 5)
Return copy of list
, starting from index from
to index to
.
from
or to
may be negative. These values are then interpreted
modulo the length of the list.
If step
is a number, only each STEPth item in the resulting
section is returned. Defaults to 1.
(-slice '(1 2 3 4 5) 1) ;; => '(2 3 4 5)
(-slice '(1 2 3 4 5) 0 3) ;; => '(1 2 3)
(-slice '(1 2 3 4 5 6 7 8 9) 1 -1 2) ;; => '(2 4 6 8)
Return a new list of the first n
items in list
, or all items if there are fewer than n
.
See also: -take-last
(-take 3 '(1 2 3 4 5)) ;; => '(1 2 3)
(-take 17 '(1 2 3 4 5)) ;; => '(1 2 3 4 5)
Return the last n
items of list
in order.
See also: -take
(-take-last 3 '(1 2 3 4 5)) ;; => '(3 4 5)
(-take-last 17 '(1 2 3 4 5)) ;; => '(1 2 3 4 5)
(-take-last 1 '(1 2 3 4 5)) ;; => '(5)
Return the tail of list
without the first n
items.
See also: -drop-last
(fn n
list
)
(-drop 3 '(1 2 3 4 5)) ;; => '(4 5)
(-drop 17 '(1 2 3 4 5)) ;; => '()
Remove the last n
items of list
and return a copy.
See also: -drop
(-drop-last 3 '(1 2 3 4 5)) ;; => '(1 2)
(-drop-last 17 '(1 2 3 4 5)) ;; => '()
Return a new list of successive items from list
while (pred
item) returns a non-nil value.
(-take-while 'even? '(1 2 3 4)) ;; => '()
(-take-while 'even? '(2 4 5 6)) ;; => '(2 4)
(--take-while (< it 4) '(1 2 3 4 3 2 1)) ;; => '(1 2 3)
Return the tail of list
starting from the first item for which (pred
item) returns nil.
(-drop-while 'even? '(1 2 3 4)) ;; => '(1 2 3 4)
(-drop-while 'even? '(2 4 5 6)) ;; => '(5 6)
(--drop-while (< it 4) '(1 2 3 4 3 2 1)) ;; => '(4 3 2 1)
Return a list whose elements are elements from list
selected
as (nth i list)
for all i from indices
.
(-select-by-indices '(4 10 2 3 6) '("v" "e" "l" "o" "c" "i" "r" "a" "p" "t" "o" "r")) ;; => '("c" "o" "l" "o" "r")
(-select-by-indices '(2 1 0) '("a" "b" "c")) ;; => '("c" "b" "a")
(-select-by-indices '(0 1 2 0 1 3 3 1) '("f" "a" "r" "l")) ;; => '("f" "a" "r" "f" "a" "l" "l" "a")
Select columns
from table
.
table
is a list of lists where each element represents one row.
It is assumed each row has the same length.
Each row is transformed such that only the specified columns
are
selected.
See also: -select-column
, -select-by-indices
(-select-columns '(0 2) '((1 2 3) (a b c) (:a :b :c))) ;; => '((1 3) (a c) (:a :c))
(-select-columns '(1) '((1 2 3) (a b c) (:a :b :c))) ;; => '((2) (b) (:b))
(-select-columns nil '((1 2 3) (a b c) (:a :b :c))) ;; => '(nil nil nil)
Select column
from table
.
table
is a list of lists where each element represents one row.
It is assumed each row has the same length.
The single selected column is returned as a list.
See also: -select-columns
, -select-by-indices
(-select-column 1 '((1 2 3) (a b c) (:a :b :c))) ;; => '(2 b :b)
Functions returning a modified copy of the input list.
Return a new list of the non-nil results of applying fn
to the items in list
.
If you want to select the original items satisfying a predicate use -filter
.
(-keep 'cdr '((1 2 3) (4 5) (6))) ;; => '((2 3) (
F438
5))
(-keep (lambda (num) (when (> num 3) (* 10 num))) '(1 2 3 4 5 6)) ;; => '(40 50 60)
(--keep (when (> it 3) (* 10 it)) '(1 2 3 4 5 6)) ;; => '(40 50 60)
Return a new list with the concatenation of the elements in the supplied lists
.
(-concat '(1)) ;; => '(1)
(-concat '(1) '(2)) ;; => '(1 2)
(-concat '(1) '(2 3) '(4)) ;; => '(1 2 3 4)
Take a nested list l
and return its contents as a single, flat list.
Note that because nil
represents a list of zero elements (an
empty list), any mention of nil in l
will disappear after
flattening. If you need to preserve nils, consider -flatten-n
or map them to some unique symbol and then map them back.
Conses of two atoms are considered "terminals", that is, they aren't flattened further.
See also: -flatten-n
(-flatten '((1))) ;; => '(1)
(-flatten '((1 (2 3) (((4 (5))))))) ;; => '(1 2 3 4 5)
(-flatten '(1 2 (3 . 4))) ;; => '(1 2 (3 . 4))
Flatten num
levels of a nested list
.
See also: -flatten
(-flatten-n 1 '((1 2) ((3 4) ((5 6))))) ;; => '(1 2 (3 4) ((5 6)))
(-flatten-n 2 '((1 2) ((3 4) ((5 6))))) ;; => '(1 2 3 4 (5 6))
(-flatten-n 3 '((1 2) ((3 4) ((5 6))))) ;; => '(1 2 3 4 5 6)
Replace all old
items in list
with new
.
Elements are compared using equal
.
See also: -replace-at
(-replace 1 "1" '(1 2 3 4 3 2 1)) ;; => '("1" 2 3 4 3 2 "1")
(-replace "foo" "bar" '("a" "nice" "foo" "sentence" "about" "foo")) ;; => '("a" "nice" "bar" "sentence" "about" "bar")
(-replace 1 2 nil) ;; => nil
Replace the first occurence of old
with new
in list
.
Elements are compared using equal
.
See also: -map-first
(-replace-first 1 "1" '(1 2 3 4 3 2 1)) ;; => '("1" 2 3 4 3 2 1)
(-replace-first "foo" "bar" '("a" "nice" "foo" "sentence" "about" "foo")) ;; => '("a" "nice" "bar" "sentence" "about" "foo")
(-replace-first 1 2 nil) ;; => nil
Replace the last occurence of old
with new
in list
.
Elements are compared using equal
.
See also: -map-last
(-replace-last 1 "1" '(1 2 3 4 3 2 1)) ;; => '(1 2 3 4 3 2 "1")
(-replace-last "foo" "bar" '("a" "nice" "foo" "sentence" "about" "foo")) ;; => '("a" "nice" "foo" "sentence" "about" "bar")
(-replace-last 1 2 nil) ;; => nil
Return a list with x
inserted into list
at position n
.
See also: -splice
, -splice-list
(-insert-at 1 'x '(a b c)) ;; => '(a x b c)
(-insert-at 12 'x '(a b c)) ;; => '(a b c x)
Return a list with element at Nth position in list
replaced with x
.
See also: -replace
(-replace-at 0 9 '(0 1 2 3 4 5)) ;; => '(9 1 2 3 4 5)
(-replace-at 1 9 '(0 1 2 3 4 5)) ;; => '(0 9 2 3 4 5)
(-replace-at 4 9 '(0 1 2 3 4 5)) ;; => '(0 1 2 3 9 5)
Return a list with element at Nth position in list
replaced with (func (nth n list))
.
See also: -map-when
(-update-at 0 (lambda (x) (+ x 9)) '(0 1 2 3 4 5)) ;; => '(9 1 2 3 4 5)
(-update-at 1 (lambda (x) (+ x 8)) '(0 1 2 3 4 5)) ;; => '(0 9 2 3 4 5)
(--update-at 2 (length it) '("foo" "bar" "baz" "quux")) ;; => '("foo" "bar" 3 "quux")
Return a list with element at Nth position in list
removed.
See also: -remove-at-indices
, -remove
(-remove-at 0 '("0" "1" "2" "3" "4" "5")) ;; => '("1" "2" "3" "4" "5")
(-remove-at 1 '("0" "1" "2" "3" "4" "5")) ;; => '("0" "2" "3" "4" "5")
(-remove-at 2 '("0" "1" "2" "3" "4" "5")) ;; => '("0" "1" "3" "4" "5")
Return a list whose elements are elements from list
without
elements selected as (nth i list)
for all i
from indices
.
See also: -remove-at
, -remove
(-remove-at-indices '(0) '("0" "1" "2" "3" "4" "5")) ;; => '("1" "2" "3" "4" "5")
(-remove-at-indices '(0 2 4) '("0" "1" "2" "3" "4" "5")) ;; => '("1" "3" "5")
(-remove-at-indices '(0 5) '("0" "1" "2" "3" "4" "5")) ;; => '("1" "2" "3" "4")
Functions reducing lists into single value.
Return the result of applying fn
to initial-value
and the
first item in list
, then applying fn
to that result and the 2nd
item, etc. If list
contains no items, return initial-value
and
fn
is not called.
In the anaphoric form --reduce-from
, the accumulated value is
exposed as symbol acc
.
(-reduce-from '- 10 '(1 2 3)) ;; => 4
(-reduce-from (lambda (memo item) (concat "(" memo " - " (int-to-string item) ")")) "10" '(1 2 3)) ;; => "(((10 - 1) - 2) - 3)"
(--reduce-from (concat acc " " it) "START" '("a" "b" "c")) ;; => "START a b c"
Replace conses with fn
, nil with initial-value
and evaluate
the resulting expression. If list
is empty, initial-value
is
returned and fn
is not called.
Note: this function works the same as -reduce-from
but the
operation associates from right instead of from left.
(-reduce-r-from '- 10 '(1 2 3)) ;; => -8
(-reduce-r-from (lambda (item memo) (concat "(" (int-to-string item) " - " memo ")")) "10" '(1 2 3)) ;; => "(1 - (2 - (3 - 10)))"
(--reduce-r-from (concat it " " acc) "END" '("a" "b" "c")) ;; => "a b c END"
Return the result of applying fn
to the first 2 items in list
,
then applying fn
to that result and the 3rd item, etc. If list
contains no items, fn
must accept no arguments as well, and
reduce return the result of calling fn
with no arguments. If
list
has only 1 item, it is returned and fn
is not called.
In the anaphoric form --reduce
, the accumulated value is
exposed as symbol acc
.
See also: -reduce-from
, -reduce-r
(-reduce '- '(1 2 3 4)) ;; => -8
(-reduce (lambda (memo item) (format "%s-%s" memo item)) '(1 2 3)) ;; => "1-2-3"
(--reduce (format "%s-%s" acc it) '(1 2 3)) ;; => "1-2-3"
Replace conses with fn
and evaluate the resulting expression.
The final nil is ignored. If list
contains no items, fn
must
accept no arguments as well, and reduce return the result of
calling fn
with no arguments. If list
has only 1 item, it is
returned and fn
is not called.
The first argument of fn
is the new item, the second is the
accumulated value.
Note: this function works the same as -reduce
but the operation
associates from right instead of from left.
See also: -reduce-r-from
, -reduce
(-reduce-r '- '(1 2 3 4)) ;; => -2
(-reduce-r (lambda (item memo) (format "%s-%s" memo item)) '(1 2 3)) ;; => "3-2-1"
(--reduce-r (format "%s-%s" acc it) '(1 2 3)) ;; => "3-2-1"
Return a list of the intermediate values of the reduction.
See -reduce-from
for explanation of the arguments.
See also: -reductions
, -reductions-r
, -reduce-r
(-reductions-from (lambda (a i) (format "(%s FN %s)" a i)) "INIT" '(1 2 3 4)) ;; => '("INIT" "(INIT FN 1)" "((INIT FN 1) FN 2)" "(((INIT FN 1) FN 2) FN 3)" "((((INIT FN 1) FN 2) FN 3) FN 4)")
(-reductions-from 'max 0 '(2 1 4 3)) ;; => '(0 2 2 4 4)
(-reductions-from '* 1 '(1 2 3 4)) ;; => '(1 1 2 6 24)
Return a list of the intermediate values of the reduction.
See -reduce-r-from
for explanation of the arguments.
See also: -reductions-r
, -reductions
, -reduce
(-reductions-r-from (lambda (i a) (format "(%s FN %s)" i a)) "INIT" '(1 2 3 4)) ;; => '("(1 FN (2 FN (3 FN (4 FN INIT))))" "(2 FN (3 FN (4 FN INIT)))" "(3 FN (4 FN INIT))" "(4 FN INIT)" "INIT")
(-reductions-r-from 'max 0 '(2 1 4 3)) ;; => '(4 4 4 3 0)
(-reductions-r-from '* 1 '(1 2 3 4)) ;; => '(24 24 12 4 1)
Return a list of the intermediate values of the reduction.
See -reduce
for explanation of the arguments.
See also: -reductions-from
, -reductions-r
, -reduce-r
(-reductions (lambda (a i) (format "(%s FN %s)" a i)) '(1 2 3 4)) ;; => '(1 "(1 FN 2)" "((1 FN 2) FN 3)" "(((1 FN 2) FN 3) FN 4)")
(-reductions '+ '(1 2 3 4)) ;; => '(1 3 6 10)
(-reductions '* '(1 2 3 4)) ;; => '(1 2 6 24)
Return a list of the intermediate values of the reduction.
See -reduce-r
for explanation of the arguments.
See also: -reductions-r-from
, -reductions
, -reduce
(-reductions-r (lambda (i a) (format "(%s FN %s)" i a)) '(1 2 3 4)) ;; => '("(1 FN (2 FN (3 FN 4)))" "(2 FN (3 FN 4))" "(3 FN 4)" 4)
(-reductions-r '+ '(1 2 3 4)) ;; => '(10 9 7 4)
(-reductions-r '* '(1 2 3 4)) ;; => '(24 24 12 4)
Counts the number of items in list
where (pred
item) is non-nil.
(-count 'even? '(1 2 3 4 5)) ;; => 2
(--count (< it 4) '(1 2 3 4)) ;; => 3
Return the sum of list
.
(-sum '()) ;; => 0
(-sum '(1)) ;; => 1
(-sum '(1 2 3 4)) ;; => 10
Return a list with running sums of items in list
.
list
must be non-empty.
(-running-sum '(1 2 3 4)) ;; => '(1 3 6 10)
(-running-sum '(1)) ;; => '(1)
(-running-sum '()) ;; Error
Return the product of list
.
(-product '()) ;; => 1
(-product '(1)) ;; => 1
(-product '(1 2 3 4)) ;; => 24
Return a list with running products of items in list
.
list
must be non-empty.
(-running-product '(1 2 3 4)) ;; => '(1 2 6 24)
(-running-product '(1)) ;; => '(1)
(-running-product '()) ;; Error
Return all prefixes of list
.
(-inits '(1 2 3 4)) ;; => '(nil (1) (1 2) (1 2 3) (1 2 3 4))
(-inits nil) ;; => '(nil)
(-inits '(1)) ;; => '(nil (1))
Return all suffixes of list
(-tails '(1 2 3 4)) ;; => '((1 2 3 4) (2 3 4) (3 4) (4) nil)
(-tails nil) ;; => '(nil)
(-tails '(1)) ;; => '((1) nil)
Return the longest common prefix of lists
.
(-common-prefix '(1)) ;; => '(1)
(-common-prefix '(1 2) nil '(1 2)) ;; => nil
(-common-prefix '(1 2) '(1 2 3) '(1 2 3 4)) ;; => '(1 2)
Return the smallest value from list
of numbers or markers.
(-min '(0)) ;; => 0
(-min '(3 2 1)) ;; => 1
(-min '(1 2 3)) ;; => 1
Take a comparison function comparator
and a list
and return
the least element of the list by the comparison function.
See also combinator -on
which can transform the values before
comparing them.
(-min-by '> '(4 3 6 1)) ;; => 1
(--min-by (> (car it) (car other)) '((1 2 3) (2) (3 2))) ;; => '(1 2 3)
(--min-by (> (length it) (length other)) '((1 2 3) (2) (3 2))) ;; => '(2)
Return the largest value from list
of numbers or markers.
(-max '(0)) ;; => 0
(-max '(3 2 1)) ;; => 3
(-max '(1 2 3)) ;; => 3
Take a comparison function comparator
and a list
and return
the greatest element of the list by the comparison function.
See also combinator -on
which can transform the values before
comparing them.
(-max-by '> '(4 3 6 1)) ;; => 6
(--max-by (> (car it) (car other)) '((1 2 3) (2) (3 2))) ;; => '(3 2)
(--max-by (> (length it) (length other)) '((1 2 3) (2) (3 2))) ;; => '(1 2 3)
Operations dual to reductions, building lists from seed value rather than consuming a list to produce a single value.
Return a list of iterated applications of fun
to init
.
This means a list of form:
(init (fun init) (fun (fun init)) ...)
n
is the length of the returned list.
(-iterate '1+ 1 10) ;; => '(1 2 3 4 5 6 7 8 9 10)
(-iterate (lambda (x) (+ x x)) 2 5) ;; => '(2 4 8 16 32)
(--iterate (* it it) 2 5) ;; => '(2 4 16 256 65536)
Build a list from seed
using fun
.
This is "dual" operation to -reduce-r
: while -reduce-r
consumes a list to produce a single value, -unfold
takes a
seed value and builds a (potentially infinite!) list.
fun
should return nil
to stop the generating process, or a
cons (a
. b
), where a
will be prepended to the result and b
is
the new seed.
(-unfold (lambda (x) (unless (= x 0) (cons x (1- x)))) 10) ;; => '(10 9 8 7 6 5 4 3 2 1)
(--unfold (when it (cons it (cdr it))) '(1 2 3 4)) ;; => '((1 2 3 4) (2 3 4) (3 4) (4))
(--unfold (when it (cons it (butlast it))) '(1 2 3 4)) ;; => '((1 2 3 4) (1 2 3) (1 2) (1))
Return t if (pred
x) is non-nil for any x in list
, else nil.
Alias: -any-p
, -some?
, -some-p
(-any? 'even? '(1 2 3)) ;; => t
(-any? 'even? '(1 3 5)) ;; => nil
(-any? 'null '(1 3 5)) ;; => nil
Return t if (pred
x) is non-nil for all x in list
, else nil.
Alias: -all-p
, -every?
, -every-p
(-all? 'even? '(1 2 3)) ;; => nil
(-all? 'even? '(2 4 6)) ;; => t
(--all? (= 0 (% it 2)) '(2 4 6)) ;; => t
Return t if (pred
x) is nil for all x in list
, else nil.
Alias: -none-p
(-none? 'even? '(1 2 3)) ;; => nil
(-none? 'even? '(1 3 5)) ;; => t
(--none? (= 0 (% it 2)) '(1 2 3)) ;; => nil
Return t
if at least one item of list
matches pred
and at least one item of list
does not match pred
.
Return nil
both if all items match the predicate or if none of the items match the predicate.
Alias: -only-some-p
(-only-some? 'even? '(1 2 3)) ;; => t
(-only-some? 'even? '(1 3 5)) ;; => nil
(-only-some? 'even? '(2 4 6)) ;; => nil
Return non-nil if list
contains element
.
The test for equality is done with equal
, or with -compare-fn
if that's non-nil.
Alias: -contains-p
(-contains? '(1 2 3) 1) ;; => t
(-contains? '(1 2 3) 2) ;; => t
(-contains? '(1 2 3) 4) ;; => nil
Return true if list
and list2
has the same items.
The order of the elements in the lists does not matter.
Alias: -same-items-p
(-same-items? '(1 2 3) '(1 2 3)) ;; => t
(-same-items? '(1 2 3) '(3 2 1)) ;; => t
(-same-items? '(1 2 3) '(1 2 3 4)) ;; => nil
Return non-nil if prefix
is prefix of list
.
Alias: -is-prefix-p
(-is-prefix? '(1 2 3) '(1 2 3 4 5)) ;; => t
(-is-prefix? '(1 2 3 4 5) '(1 2 3)) ;; => nil
(-is-prefix? '(1 3) '(1 2 3 4 5)) ;; => nil
Return non-nil if suffix
is suffix of list
.
Alias: -is-suffix-p
(-is-suffix? '(3 4 5) '(1 2 3 4 5)) ;; => t
(-is-suffix? '(1 2 3 4 5) '(3 4 5)) ;; => nil
(-is-suffix? '(3 5) '(1 2 3 4 5)) ;; => nil
Return non-nil if infix
is infix of list
.
This operation runs in o
(n^2) time
Alias: -is-infix-p
(-is-infix? '(1 2 3) '(1 2 3 4 5)) ;; => t
(-is-infix? '(2 3 4) '(1 2 3 4 5)) ;; => t
(-is-infix? '(3 4 5) '(1 2 3 4 5)) ;; => t
Functions partitioning the input list into a list of lists.
Return a list of ((-take n
list
) (-drop n
list
)), in no more than one pass through the list.
(-split-at 3 '(1 2 3 4 5)) ;; => '((1 2 3) (4 5))
(-split-at 17 '(1 2 3 4 5)) ;; => '((1 2 3 4 5) nil)
Return a list of ((-take-while pred
list
) (-drop-while pred
list
)), in no more than one pass through the list.
(-split-with 'even? '(1 2 3 4)) ;; => '(nil (1 2 3 4))
(-split-with 'even? '(2 4 5 6)) ;; => '((2 4) (5 6))
(--split-with (< it 4) '(1 2 3 4 3 2 1)) ;; => '((1 2 3) (4 3 2 1))
Split the list
each time item
is found.
Unlike -partition-by
, the item
is discarded from the results.
Empty lists are also removed from the result.
Comparison is done by equal
.
See also -split-when
(-split-on '| '(Nil | Leaf a | Node [Tree a])) ;; => '((Nil) (Leaf a) (Node [Tree a]))
(-split-on ':endgroup '("a" "b" :endgroup "c" :endgroup "d" "e")) ;; => '(("a" "b") ("c") ("d" "e"))
(-split-on ':endgroup '("a" "b" :endgroup :endgroup "d" "e")) ;; => '(("a" "b") ("d" "e"))
Split the list
on each element where fn
returns non-nil.
Unlike -partition-by
, the "matched" element is discarded from
the results. Empty lists are also removed from the result.
This function can be thought of as a generalization of
split-string
.
(-split-when 'even? '(1 2 3 4 5 6)) ;; => '((1) (3) (5))
(-split-when 'even? '(1 2 3 4 6 8 9)) ;; => '((1) (3) (9))
(--split-when (memq it '(&optional &rest)) '(a b &optional c d &rest args)) ;; => '((a b) (c d) (args))
Return a list of ((-filter pred
list
) (-remove pred
list
)), in one pass through the list.
(-separate (lambda (num) (= 0 (% num 2))) '(1 2 3 4 5 6 7)) ;; => '((2 4 6) (1 3 5 7))
(--separate (< it 5) '(3 7 5 9 3 2 1 4 6)) ;; => '((3 3 2 1 4) (7 5 9 6))
(-separate 'cdr '((1 2) (1) (1 2 3) (4))) ;; => '(((1 2) (1 2 3)) ((1) (4)))
Return a new list with the items in list
grouped into n-
sized sublists.
If there are not enough items to make the last group n-
sized,
those items are discarded.
(-partition 2 '(1 2 3 4 5 6)) ;; => '((1 2) (3 4) (5 6))
(-partition 2 '(1 2 3 4 5 6 7)) ;; => '((1 2) (3 4) (5 6))
(-partition 3 '(1 2 3 4 5 6 7)) ;; => '((1 2 3) (4 5 6))
Return a new list with the items in list
grouped into n-
sized sublists.
The last group may contain less than n
items.
(-partition-all 2 '(1 2 3 4 5 6)) ;; => '((1 2) (3 4) (5 6))
(-partition-all 2 '(1 2 3 4 5 6 7)) ;; => '((1 2) (3 4) (5 6) (7))
(-partition-all 3 '(1 2 3 4 5 6 7)) ;; => '((1 2 3) (4 5 6) (7))
Return a new list with the items in list grouped into
n-
sized sublists at offsets step
apart.
If there are not enough items to make the last group n-
sized,
those items are discarded.
(-partition-in-steps 2 1 '(1 2 3 4)) ;; => '((1 2) (2 3) (3 4))
(-partition-in-steps 3 2 '(1 2 3 4)) ;; => '((1 2 3))
(-partition-in-steps 3 2 '(1 2 3 4 5)) ;; => '((1 2 3) (3 4 5))
Return a new list with the items in list
grouped into n-
sized sublists at offsets step
apart.
The last groups may contain less than n
items.
(-partition-all-in-steps 2 1 '(1 2 3 4)) ;; => '((1 2) (2 3) (3 4) (4))
(-partition-all-in-steps 3 2 '(1 2 3 4)) ;; => '((1 2 3) (3 4))
(-partition-all-in-steps 3 2 '(1 2 3 4 5)) ;; => '((1 2 3) (3 4 5) (5))
Apply fn
to each item in list
, splitting it each time fn
returns a new value.
(-partition-by 'even? '()) ;; => '()
(-partition-by 'even? '(1 1 2 2 2 3 4 6 8)) ;; => '((1 1) (2 2 2) (3) (4 6 8))
(--partition-by (< it 3) '(1 2 3 4 3 2 1)) ;; => '((1 2) (3 4 3) (2 1))
Apply fn
to the first item in list
. That is the header
value. Apply fn
to each item in list
, splitting it each time fn
returns the header value, but only after seeing at least one
other value (the body).
(--partition-by-header (= it 1) '(1 2 3 1 2 1 2 3 4)) ;; => '((1 2 3) (1 2) (1 2 3 4))
(--partition-by-header (> it 0) '(1 2 0 1 0 1 2 3 0)) ;; => '((1 2 0) (1 0) (1 2 3 0))
(-partition-by-header 'even? '(2 1 1 1 4 1 3 5 6 6 1)) ;; => '((2 1 1 1) (4 1 3 5) (6 6 1))
Partition directly after each time pred
is true on an element of list
.
(-partition-after-pred (function oddp) '()) ;; => '()
(-partition-after-pred (function oddp) '(1)) ;; => '((1))
(-partition-after-pred (function oddp) '(0 1)) ;; => '((0 1))
Partition directly before each time pred
is true on an element of list
.
(-partition-before-pred (function oddp) '()) ;; => '()
(-partition-before-pred (function oddp) '(1)) ;; => '((1))
(-partition-before-pred (function oddp) '(0 1)) ;; => '((0) (1))
Partition directly before each time item
appears in list
.
(-partition-before-item 3 '()) ;; => '()
(-partition-before-item 3 '(1)) ;; => '((1))
(-partition-before-item 3 '(3)) ;; => '((3))
Partition directly after each time item
appears in list
.
(-partition-after-item 3 '()) ;; => '()
(-partition-after-item 3 '(1)) ;; => '((1))
(-partition-after-item 3 '(3)) ;; => '((3))
Separate list
into an alist whose keys are fn
applied to the
elements of list
. Keys are compared by equal
.
(-group-by 'even? '()) ;; => '()
(-group-by 'even? '(1 1 2 2 2 3 4 6 8)) ;; => '((nil 1 1 3) (t 2 2 2 4 6 8))
(--group-by (car (split-string it "/")) '("a/b" "c/d" "a/e")) ;; => '(("a" "a/b" "a/e") ("c" "c/d"))
Return indices of elements based on predicates, sort elements by indices etc.
Return the index of the first element in the given list
which
is equal to the query element elem
, or nil if there is no
such element.
(-elem-index 2 '(6 7 8 2 3 4)) ;; => 3
(-elem-index "bar" '("foo" "bar" "baz")) ;; => 1
(-elem-index '(1 2) '((3) (5 6) (1 2) nil)) ;; => 2
Return the indices of all elements in list
equal to the query
element elem
, in ascending order.
(-elem-indices 2 '(6 7 8 2 3 4 2 1)) ;; => '(3 6)
(-elem-indices "bar" '("foo" "bar" "baz")) ;; => '(1)
(-elem-indices '(1 2) '((3) (1 2) (5 6) (1 2) nil)) ;; => '(1 3)
Take a predicate pred
and a list
and return the index of the
first element in the list satisfying the predicate, or nil if
there is no such element.
See also -first
.
(-find-index 'even? '(2 4 1 6 3 3 5 8)) ;; => 0
(--find-index (< 5 it) '(2 4 1 6 3 3 5 8)) ;; => 3
(-find-index (-partial 'string-lessp "baz") '("bar" "foo" "baz")) ;; => 1
Take a predicate pred
and a list
and return the index of the
last element in the list satisfying the predicate, or nil if
there is no such element.
See also -last
.
(-find-last-index 'even? '(2 4 1 6 3 3 5 8)) ;; => 7
(--find-last-index (< 5 it) '(2 7 1 6 3 8 5 2)) ;; => 5
(-find-last-index (-partial 'string-lessp "baz") '("q" "foo" "baz")) ;; => 1
Return the indices of all elements in list
satisfying the
predicate pred
, in ascending order.
(-find-indices 'even? '(2 4 1 6 3 3 5 8)) ;; => '(0 1 3 7)
(--find-indices (< 5 it) '(2 4 1 6 3 3 5 8)) ;; => '(3 7)
(-find-indices (-partial 'string-lessp "baz") '("bar" "foo" "baz")) ;; => '(1)
Grade elements of list
using comparator
relation, yielding a
permutation vector such that applying this permutation to list
sorts it in ascending order.
(-grade-up '< '(3 1 4 2 1 3 3)) ;; => '(1 4 3 0 5 6 2)
(let ((l '(3 1 4 2 1 3 3))) (-select-by-indices (-grade-up '< l) l)) ;; => '(1 1 2 3 3 3 4)
Grade elements of list
using comparator
relation, yielding a
permutation vector such that applying this permutation to list
sorts it in descending order.
(-grade-down '< '(3 1 4 2 1 3 3)) ;; => '(2 0 5 6 3 1 4)
(let ((l '(3 1 4 2 1 3 3))) (-select-by-indices (-grade-down '< l) l)) ;; => '(4 3 3 3 2 1 1)
Operations pretending lists are sets.
Return a new list containing the elements of list
and elements of list2
that are not in list
.
The test for equality is done with equal
,
or with -compare-fn
if that's non-nil.
(-union '(1 2 3) '(3 4 5)) ;; => '(1 2 3 4 5)
(-union '(1 2 3 4) '()) ;; => '(1 2 3 4)
(-union '(1 1 2 2) '(3 2 1)) ;; => '(1 1 2 2 3)
Return a new list with only the members of list
that are not in list2
.
The test for equality is done with equal
,
or with -compare-fn
if that's non-nil.
(-difference '() '()) ;; => '()
(-difference '(1 2 3) '(4 5 6)) ;; => '(1 2 3)
(-difference '(1 2 3 4) '(3 4 5 6)) ;; => '(1 2)
Return a new list containing only the elements that are members of both list
and list2
.
The test for equality is done with equal
,
or with -compare-fn
if that's non-nil.
(-intersection '() '()) ;; => '()
(-intersection '(1 2 3) '(4 5 6)) ;; => '()
(-intersection '(1 2 3 4) '(3 4 5 6)) ;; => '(3 4)
Return the power set of list
.
(-powerset '()) ;; => '(nil)
(-powerset '(x y z)) ;; => '((x y z) (x y) (x z) (x) (y z) (y) (z) nil)
Return the permutations of list
.
(-permutations '()) ;; => '(nil)
(-permutations '(1 2)) ;; => '((1 2) (2 1))
(-permutations '(a b c)) ;; => '((a b c) (a c b) (b a c) (b c a) (c a b) (c b a))
Return a new list with all duplicates removed.
The test for equality is done with equal
,
or with -compare-fn
if that's non-nil.
Alias: -uniq
(-distinct '()) ;; => '()
(-distinct '(1 2 2 4)) ;; => '(1 2 4)
Other list functions not fit to be classified elsewhere.
Rotate list
n
places to the right. With n
negative, rotate to the left.
The time complexity is o
(n).
(-rotate 3 '(1 2 3 4 5 6 7)) ;; => '(5 6 7 1 2 3 4)
(-rotate -3 '(1 2 3 4 5 6 7)) ;; => '(4 5 6 7 1 2 3)
Return a list with x
repeated n
times.
Return nil if n
is less than 1.
(-repeat 3 :a) ;; => '(:a :a :a)
(-repeat 1 :a) ;; => '(:a)
(-repeat 0 :a) ;; => nil
Make a new list from the elements of args
.
The last 2 members of args
are used as the final cons of the
result so if the final member of args
is not a list the result is
a dotted list.
(-cons* 1 2) ;; => '(1 . 2)
(-cons* 1 2 3) ;; => '(1 2 . 3)
(-cons* 1) ;; => 1
Append elem
to the end of the list.
This is like cons
, but operates on the end of list.
If elements
is non nil, append these to the list as well.
(-snoc '(1 2 3) 4) ;; => '(1 2 3 4)
(-snoc '(1 2 3) 4 5 6) ;; => '(1 2 3 4 5 6)
(-snoc '(1 2 3) '(4 5 6)) ;; => '(1 2 3 (4 5 6))
Return a new list of all elements in list
separated by sep
.
(-interpose "-" '()) ;; => '()
(-interpose "-" '("a")) ;; => '("a")
(-interpose "-" '("a" "b" "c")) ;; => '("a" "-" "b" "-" "c")
Return a new list of the first item in each list, then the second etc.
(-interleave '(1 2) '("a" "b")) ;; => '(1 "a" 2 "b")
(-interleave '(1 2) '("a" "b") '("A" "B")) ;; => '(1 "a" "A" 2 "b" "B")
(-interleave '(1 2 3) '("a" "b")) ;; => '(1 "a" 2 "b")
Zip the two lists list1
and list2
using a function fn
. This
function is applied pairwise taking as first argument element of
list1
and as second argument element of list2
at corresponding
position.
The anaphoric form --zip-with
binds the elements from list1
as symbol it
,
and the elements from list2
as symbol other
.
(-zip-with '+ '(1 2 3) '(4 5 6)) ;; => '(5 7 9)
(-zip-with 'cons '(1 2 3) '(4 5 6)) ;; => '((1 . 4) (2 . 5) (3 . 6))
(--zip-with (concat it " and " other) '("Batman" "Jekyll") '("Robin" "Hyde")) ;; => '("Batman and Robin" "Jekyll and Hyde")
Zip lists
together. Group the head of each list, followed by the
second elements of each list, and so on. The lengths of the returned
groupings are equal to the length of the shortest input list.
If two lists are provided as arguments, return the groupings as a list of cons cells. Otherwise, return the groupings as a list of lists.
Please note! This distinction is being removed in an upcoming 3.0 release of Dash. If you rely on this behavior, use -zip-pair instead.
(-zip '(1 2 3) '(4 5 6)) ;; => '((1 . 4) (2 . 5) (3 . 6))
(-zip '(1 2 3) '(4 5 6 7)) ;; => '((1 . 4) (2 . 5) (3 . 6))
(-zip '(1 2 3 4) '(4 5 6)) ;; => '((1 . 4) (2 . 5) (3 . 6))
Zip lists
, with fill-value
padded onto the shorter lists. The
lengths of the returned groupings are equal to the length of the
longest input list.
(-zip-fill 0 '(1 2 3 4 5) '(6 7 8 9)) ;; => '((1 . 6) (2 . 7) (3 . 8) (4 . 9) (5 . 0))
Unzip lists
.
This works just like -zip
but takes a list of lists instead of
a variable number of arguments, such that
(-unzip (-zip `l1` `l2` `l3` ...))
is identity (given that the lists are the same length).
See also: -zip
(-unzip (-zip '(1 2 3) '(a b c) '("e" "f" "g"))) ;; => '((1 2 3) (a b c) ("e" "f" "g"))
(-unzip '((1 2) (3 4) (5 6) (7 8) (9 10))) ;; => '((1 3 5 7 9) (2 4 6 8 10))
Return an infinite copy of list
that will cycle through the
elements and repeat from the beginning.
(-take 5 (-cycle '(1 2 3))) ;; => '(1 2 3 1 2)
(-take 7 (-cycle '(1 "and" 3))) ;; => '(1 "and" 3 1 "and" 3 1)
(-zip (-cycle '(1 2 3)) '(1 2)) ;; => '((1 . 1) (2 . 2))
Appends fill-value
to the end of each list in lists
such that they
will all have the same length.
(-pad 0 '()) ;; => '(nil)
(-pad 0 '(1)) ;; => '((1))
(-pad 0 '(1 2 3) '(4 5)) ;; => '((1 2 3) (4 5 0))
Compute outer product of lists
using function fn
.
The function fn
should have the same arity as the number of
supplied lists.
The outer product is computed by applying fn to all possible combinations created by taking one element from each list in order. The dimension of the result is (length lists).
See also: -table-flat
(-table '* '(1 2 3) '(1 2 3)) ;; => '((1 2 3) (2 4 6) (3 6 9))
(-table (lambda (a b) (-sum (-zip-with '* a b))) '((1 2) (3 4)) '((1 3) (2 4))) ;; => '((7 15) (10 22))
(apply '-table 'list (-repeat 3 '(1 2))) ;; => '((((1 1 1) (2 1 1)) ((1 2 1) (2 2 1))) (((1 1 2) (2 1 2)) ((1 2 2) (2 2 2))))
Compute flat outer product of lists
using function fn
.
The function fn
should have the same arity as the number of
supplied lists.
The outer product is computed by applying fn to all possible combinations created by taking one element from each list in order. The results are flattened, ignoring the tensor structure of the result. This is equivalent to calling:
(-flatten-n (1- (length lists)) (apply '-table fn lists))
but the implementation here is much more efficient.
See also: -flatten-n
, -table
(-table-flat 'list '(1 2 3) '(a b c)) ;; => '((1 a) (2 a) (3 a) (1 b) (2 b) (3 b) (1 c) (2 c) (3 c))
(-table-flat '* '(1 2 3) '(1 2 3)) ;; => '(1 2 3 2 4 6 3 6 9)
(apply '-table-flat 'list (-repeat 3 '(1 2))) ;; => '((1 1 1) (2 1 1) (1 2 1) (2 2 1) (1 1 2) (2 1 2) (1 2 2) (2 2 2))
Return the first x in list
where (pred
x) is non-nil, else nil.
To get the first item in the list no questions asked, use car
.
Alias: -find
(-first 'even? '(1 2 3)) ;; => 2
(-first 'even? '(1 3 5)) ;; => nil
(-first 'null '(1 3 5)) ;; => nil
Return (pred
x) for the first list
item where (pred
x) is non-nil, else nil.
Alias: -any
(-some 'even? '(1 2 3)) ;; => t
(-some 'null '(1 2 3)) ;; => nil
(-some 'null '(1 2 nil)) ;; => t
Return the last x in list
where (pred
x) is non-nil, else nil.
(-last 'even? '(1 2 3 4 5 6 3 3 3)) ;; => 6
(-last 'even? '(1 3 7 5 9)) ;; => nil
(--last (> (length it) 3) '("a" "looong" "word" "and" "short" "one")) ;; => "short"
Return the first item of list
, or nil on an empty list.
See also: -second-item
, -last-item
.
(fn list
)
(-first-item '(1 2 3)) ;; => 1
(-first-item nil) ;; => nil
(let ((list (list 1 2 3))) (setf (-first-item list) 5) list) ;; => '(5 2 3)
Return the second item of list
, or nil if list
is too short.
See also: -third-item
.
(fn list
)
(-second-item '(1 2 3)) ;; => 2
(-second-item nil) ;; => nil
Return the third item of list
, or nil if list
is too short.
See also: -fourth-item
.
(fn list
)
(-third-item '(1 2 3)) ;; => 3
(-third-item nil) ;; => nil
Return the fourth item of list
, or nil if list
is too short.
See also: -fifth-item
.
(-fourth-item '(1 2 3 4)) ;; => 4
(-fourth-item nil) ;; => nil
Return the fifth item of list
, or nil if list
is too short.
See also: -last-item
.
(-fifth-item '(1 2 3 4 5)) ;; => 5
(-fifth-item nil) ;; => nil
Return the last item of list
, or nil on an empty list.
(-last-item '(1 2 3)) ;; => 3
(-last-item nil) ;; => nil
(let ((list (list 1 2 3))) (setf (-last-item list) 5) list) ;; => '(1 2 5)
Return a list of all items in list except for the last.
(-butlast '(1 2 3)) ;; => '(1 2)
(-butlast '(1 2)) ;; => '(1)
(-butlast '(1)) ;; => nil
Sort list
, stably, comparing elements using comparator
.
Return the sorted list. list
is not
modified by side effects.
comparator
is called with two elements of list
, and should return non-nil
if the first element should sort before the second.
(-sort '< '(3 1 2)) ;; => '(1 2 3)
(-sort '> '(3 1 2)) ;; => '(3 2 1)
(--sort (< it other) '(3 1 2)) ;; => '(1 2 3)
Return a list with args
.
If first item of args
is already a list, simply return args
. If
not, return a list with args
as elements.
(-list 1) ;; => '(1)
(-list 1 2 3) ;; => '(1 2 3)
(-list '(1 2 3)) ;; => '(1 2 3)
Compute the (least) fixpoint of fn
with initial input list
.
fn
is called at least once, results are compared with equal
.
(-fix (lambda (l) (-non-nil (--mapcat (-split-at (/ (length it) 2) it) l))) '((1 2 3 4 5 6))) ;; => '((1) (2) (3) (4) (5) (6))
(let ((data '(("starwars" "scifi") ("jedi" "starwars" "warrior")))) (--fix (-uniq (--mapcat (cons it (cdr (assoc it data))) it)) '("jedi" "book"))) ;; => '("jedi" "starwars" "warrior" "scifi" "book")
Functions pretending lists are trees.
Return a sequence of the nodes in tree
, in depth-first search order.
branch
is a predicate of one argument that returns non-nil if the
passed argument is a branch, that is, a node that can have children.
children
is a function of one argument that returns the children
of the passed branch node.
Non-branch nodes are simply copied.
(-tree-seq 'listp 'identity '(1 (2 3) 4 (5 (6 7)))) ;; => '((1 (2 3) 4 (5 (6 7))) 1 (2 3) 2 3 4 (5 (6 7)) 5 (6 7) 6 7)
(-tree-seq 'listp 'reverse '(1 (2 3) 4 (5 (6 7)))) ;; => '((1 (2 3) 4 (5 (6 7))) (5 (6 7)) (6 7) 7 6 5 4 (2 3) 3 2 1)
(--tree-seq (vectorp it) (append it nil) [1 [2 3] 4 [5 [6 7]]]) ;; => '([1 [2 3] 4 [5 [6 7]]] 1 [2 3] 2 3 4 [5 [6 7]] 5 [6 7] 6 7)
Apply fn
to each element of tree
while preserving the tree structure.
(-tree-map '1+ '(1 (2 3) (4 (5 6) 7))) ;; => '(2 (3 4) (5 (6 7) 8))
(-tree-map '(lambda (x) (cons x (expt 2 x))) '(1 (2 3) 4)) ;; => '((1 . 2) ((2 . 4) (3 . 8)) (4 . 16))
(--tree-map (length it) '("<body>" ("<p>" "text" "</p>") "</body>")) ;; => '(6 (3 4 4) 7)
Call fun
on each node of tree
that satisfies pred
.
If pred
returns nil, continue descending down this node. If pred
returns non-nil, apply fun
to this node and do not descend
further.
(-tree-map-nodes 'vectorp (lambda (x) (-sum (append x nil))) '(1 [2 3] 4 (5 [6 7] 8))) ;; => '(1 5 4 (5 13 8))
(-tree-map-nodes 'keywordp (lambda (x) (symbol-name x)) '(1 :foo 4 ((5 6 :bar) :baz 8))) ;; => '(1 ":foo" 4 ((5 6 ":bar") ":baz" 8))
(--tree-map-nodes (eq (car-safe it) 'add-mode) (-concat it (list :mode 'emacs-lisp-mode)) '(with-mode emacs-lisp-mode (foo bar) (add-mode a b) (baz (add-mode c d)))) ;; => '(with-mode emacs-lisp-mode (foo bar) (add-mode a b :mode emacs-lisp-mode) (baz (add-mode c d :mode emacs-lisp-mode)))
Use fn
to reduce elements of list tree
.
If elements of tree
are lists themselves, apply the reduction recursively.
fn
is first applied to first element of the list and second
element, then on this result and third element from the list etc.
See -reduce-r
for how exactly are lists of zero or one element handled.
(-tree-reduce '+ '(1 (2 3) (4 5))) ;; => 15
(-tree-reduce 'concat '("strings" (" on" " various") ((" levels")))) ;; => "strings on various levels"
(--tree-reduce (cond ((stringp it) (concat it " " acc)) (t (let ((sn (symbol-name it))) (concat "<" sn ">" acc "</" sn ">")))) '(body (p "some words") (div "more" (b "bold") "words"))) ;; => "<body><p>some words</p> <div>more <b>bold</b> words</div></body>"
Use fn
to reduce elements of list tree
.
If elements of tree
are lists themselves, apply the reduction recursively.
fn
is first applied to init-value
and first element of the list,
then on this result and second element from the list etc.
The initial value is ignored on cons pairs as they always contain two elements.
(-tree-reduce-from '+ 1 '(1 (1 1) ((1)))) ;; => 8
(--tree-reduce-from (-concat acc (list it)) nil '(1 (2 3 (4 5)) (6 7))) ;; => '((7 6) ((5 4) 3 2) 1)
Apply fn
to each element of tree
, and make a list of the results.
If elements of tree
are lists themselves, apply fn
recursively to
elements of these nested lists.
Then reduce the resulting lists using folder
and initial value
init-value
. See -reduce-r-from
.
This is the same as calling -tree-reduce
after -tree-map
but is twice as fast as it only traverse the structure once.
(-tree-mapreduce 'list 'append '(1 (2 (3 4) (5 6
10000
)) (7 (8 9)))) ;; => '(1 2 3 4 5 6 7 8 9)
(--tree-mapreduce 1 (+ it acc) '(1 (2 (4 9) (2 1)) (7 (4 3)))) ;; => 9
(--tree-mapreduce 0 (max acc (1+ it)) '(1 (2 (4 9) (2 1)) (7 (4 3)))) ;; => 3
Apply fn
to each element of tree
, and make a list of the results.
If elements of tree
are lists themselves, apply fn
recursively to
elements of these nested lists.
Then reduce the resulting lists using folder
and initial value
init-value
. See -reduce-r-from
.
This is the same as calling -tree-reduce-from
after -tree-map
but is twice as fast as it only traverse the structure once.
(-tree-mapreduce-from 'identity '* 1 '(1 (2 (3 4) (5 6)) (7 (8 9)))) ;; => 362880
(--tree-mapreduce-from (+ it it) (cons it acc) nil '(1 (2 (4 9) (2 1)) (7 (4 3)))) ;; => '(2 (4 (8 18) (4 2)) (14 (8 6)))
(concat "{" (--tree-mapreduce-from (cond ((-cons-pair? it) (concat (symbol-name (car it)) " -> " (symbol-name (cdr it)))) (t (concat (symbol-name it) " : {"))) (concat it (unless (or (equal acc "}") (equal (substring it (1- (length it))) "{")) ", ") acc) "}" '((elips-mode (foo (bar . booze)) (baz . qux)) (c-mode (foo . bla) (bum . bam))))) ;; => "{elips-mode : {foo : {bar -> booze}, baz -> qux}, c-mode : {foo -> bla, bum -> bam}}"
Create a deep copy of list
.
The new list has the same elements and structure but all cons are
replaced with new ones. This is useful when you need to clone a
structure such as plist or alist.
(let* ((a '(1 2 3)) (b (-clone a))) (nreverse a) b) ;; => '(1 2 3)
Thread the expr through the forms. Insert x
as the second item
in the first form, making a list of it if it is not a list
already. If there are more forms, insert the first form as the
second item in second form, etc.
(-> '(2 3 5)) ;; => '(2 3 5)
(-> '(2 3 5) (append '(8 13))) ;; => '(2 3 5 8 13)
(-> '(2 3 5) (append '(8 13)) (-slice 1 -1)) ;; => '(3 5 8)
Thread the expr through the forms. Insert x
as the last item
in the first form, making a list of it if it is not a list
already. If there are more forms, insert the first form as the
last item in second form, etc.
(->> '(1 2 3) (-map 'square)) ;; => '(1 4 9)
(->> '(1 2 3) (-map 'square) (-remove 'even?)) ;; => '(1 9)
(->> '(1 2 3) (-map 'square) (-reduce '+)) ;; => 14
Starting with the value of x
, thread each expression through forms
.
Insert x
at the position signified by the symbol it
in the first
form. If there are more forms, insert the first form at the position
signified by it
in in second form, etc.
(--> "def" (concat "abc" it "ghi")) ;; => "abcdefghi"
(--> "def" (concat "abc" it "ghi") (upcase it)) ;; => "ABCDEFGHI"
(--> "def" (concat "abc" it "ghi") upcase) ;; => "ABCDEFGHI"
Starting with value
, thread variable
through forms
.
In the first form, bind variable
to value
. In the second form, bind
variable
to the result of the first form, and so forth.
(-as-> 3 my-var (1+ my-var) (list my-var) (mapcar (lambda (ele) (* 2 ele)) my-var)) ;; => '(8)
(-as-> 3 my-var 1+) ;; => 4
(-as-> 3 my-var) ;; => 3
When expr is non-nil, thread it through the first form (via ->
),
and when that result is non-nil, through the next form, etc.
(-some-> '(2 3 5)) ;; => '(2 3 5)
(-some-> 5 square) ;; => 25
(-some-> 5 even? square) ;; => nil
When expr is non-nil, thread it through the first form (via ->>
),
and when that result is non-nil, through the next form, etc.
(-some->> '(1 2 3) (-map 'square)) ;; => '(1 4 9)
(-some->> '(1 3 5) (-last 'even?) (+ 100)) ;; => nil
(-some->> '(2 4 6) (-last 'even?) (+ 100)) ;; => 106
When expr in non-nil, thread it through the first form (via -->
),
and when that result is non-nil, through the next form, etc.
(-some--> "def" (concat "abc" it "ghi")) ;; => "abcdefghi"
(-some--> nil (concat "abc" it "ghi")) ;; => nil
(-some--> '(1 3 5) (-filter 'even? it) (append it it) (-map 'square it)) ;; => nil
Convenient versions of let
and let*
constructs combined with flow control.
If val
evaluates to non-nil, bind it to var
and execute body.
Note: binding is done according to -let
.
(fn (var
val
) &rest body
)
(-when-let (match-index (string-match "d" "abcd")) (+ match-index 2)) ;; => 5
(-when-let ((&plist :foo foo) (list :foo "foo")) foo) ;; => "foo"
(-when-let ((&plist :foo foo) (list :bar "bar")) foo) ;; => nil
If all vals
evaluate to true, bind them to their corresponding
vars
and execute body. vars-vals
should be a list of (var
val
)
pairs.
Note: binding is done according to -let*
. vals
are evaluated
sequentially, and evaluation stops after the first nil val
is
encountered.
(-when-let* ((x 5) (y 3) (z (+ y 4))) (+ x y z)) ;; => 15
(-when-let* ((x 5) (y nil) (z 7)) (+ x y z)) ;; => nil
If val
evaluates to non-nil, bind it to var
and do then
,
otherwise do else
.
Note: binding is done according to -let
.
(fn (var
val
) then
&rest else
)
(-if-let (match-index (string-match "d" "abc")) (+ match-index 3) 7) ;; => 7
(--if-let (even? 4) it nil) ;; => t
If all vals
evaluate to true, bind them to their corresponding
vars
and do then
, otherwise do else
. vars-vals
should be a list
of (var
val
) pairs.
Note: binding is done according to -let*
. vals
are evaluated
sequentially, and evaluation stops after the first nil val
is
encountered.
(-if-let* ((x 5) (y 3) (z 7)) (+ x y z) "foo") ;; => 15
(-if-let* ((x 5) (y nil) (z 7)) (+ x y z) "foo") ;; => "foo"
(-if-let* (((_ _ x) '(nil nil 7))) x) ;; => 7
Bind variables according to varlist
then eval body
.
varlist
is a list of lists of the form (pattern
source
). Each
pattern
is matched against the source
"structurally". source
is only evaluated once for each pattern
. Each pattern
is matched
recursively, and can therefore contain sub-patterns which are
matched against corresponding sub-expressions of source
.
All the SOURCEs are evalled before any symbols are bound (i.e. "in parallel").
If varlist
only contains one (pattern
source
) element, you can
optionally specify it using a vector and discarding the
outer-most parens. Thus
(-let ((`pattern` `source`)) ..)
becomes
(-let [`pattern` `source`] ..).
-let
uses a convention of not binding places (symbols) starting
with _ whenever it's possible. You can use this to skip over
entries you don't care about. However, this is not always
possible (as a result of implementation) and these symbols might
get bound to undefined values.
Following is the overview of supported patterns. Remember that patterns can be matched recursively, so every a, b, aK in the following can be a matching construct and not necessarily a symbol/variable.
Symbol:
a - bind the `source` to `a`. This is just like regular `let`.
Conses and lists:
(a) - bind `car` of cons/list to `a`
(a . b) - bind car of cons to `a` and `cdr` to `b`
(a b) - bind car of list to `a` and `cadr` to `b`
(a1 a2 a3 ...) - bind 0th car of list to `a1`, 1st to `a2`, 2nd to `a3` ...
(a1 a2 a3 ... aN . rest) - as above, but bind the Nth cdr to `rest`.
Vectors:
[a] - bind 0th element of a non-list sequence to `a` (works with
vectors, strings, bit arrays...)
[a1 a2 a3 ...] - bind 0th element of non-list sequence to `a0`, 1st to
`a1`, 2nd to `a2`, ...
If the `pattern` is shorter than `source`, the values at
places not in `pattern` are ignored.
If the `pattern` is longer than `source`, an `error` is
thrown.
[a1 a2 a3 ... &rest rest] - as above, but bind the rest of
the sequence to `rest`. This is
conceptually the same as improper list
matching (a1 a2 ... aN . rest)
Key/value stores:
(&plist key0 a0 ... keyN aN) - bind value mapped by keyK in the
`source` plist to aK. If the
value is not found, aK is nil.
(&alist key0 a0 ... keyN aN) - bind value mapped by keyK in the
`source` alist to aK. If the
value is not found, aK is nil.
(&hash key0 a0 ... keyN aN) - bind value mapped by keyK in the
`source` hash table to aK. If the
value is not found, aK is nil.
Further, special keyword &keys supports "inline" matching of
plist-like key-value pairs, similarly to &keys keyword of
cl-defun
.
(a1 a2 ... aN &keys key1 b1 ... keyN bK)
This binds n
values from the list to a1 ... aN, then interprets
the cdr as a plist (see key/value matching above).
You can name the source using the syntax symbol
&as pattern
.
This syntax works with lists (proper or improper), vectors and
all types of maps.
(list &as a b c) (list 1 2 3)
binds a
to 1, b
to 2, c
to 3 and list
to (1 2 3).
Similarly:
(bounds &as beg . end) (cons 1 2)
binds beg
to 1, end
to 2 and bounds
to (1 . 2).
(items &as first . rest) (list 1 2 3)
binds first
to 1, rest
to (2 3) and items
to (1 2 3)
[vect &as _ b c] [1 2 3]
binds b
to 2, c
to 3 and vect
to [1 2 3] (_ avoids binding as usual).
(plist &as &plist :b b) (list :a 1 :b 2 :c 3)
binds b
to 2 and plist
to (:a 1 :b 2 :c 3). Same for &alist and &hash.
This is especially useful when we want to capture the result of a computation and destructure at the same time. Consider the form (function-returning-complex-structure) returning a list of two vectors with two items each. We want to capture this entire result and pass it to another computation, but at the same time we want to get the second item from each vector. We can achieve it with pattern
(result &as [_ a] [_ b]) (function-returning-complex-structure)
Note: Clojure programmers may know this feature as the ":as binding". The difference is that we put the &as at the front because we need to support improper list binding.
(-let (([a (b c) d] [1 (2 3) 4])) (list a b c d)) ;; => '(1 2 3 4)
(-let [(a b c . d) (list 1 2 3 4 5 6)] (list a b c d)) ;; => '(1 2 3 (4 5 6))
(-let [(&plist :foo foo :bar bar) (list :baz 3 :foo 1 :qux 4 :bar 2)] (list foo bar)) ;; => '(1 2)
Bind variables according to varlist
then eval body
.
varlist
is a list of lists of the form (pattern
source
). Each
pattern
is matched against the source
structurally. source
is
only evaluated once for each pattern
.
Each source
can refer to the symbols already bound by this
varlist
. This is useful if you want to destructure source
recursively but also want to name the intermediate structures.
See -let
for the list of all possible patterns.
(-let* (((a . b) (cons 1 2)) ((c . d) (cons 3 4))) (list a b c d)) ;; => '(1 2 3 4)
(-let* (((a . b) (cons 1 (cons 2 3))) ((c . d) b)) (list a b c d)) ;; => '(1 (2 . 3) 2 3)
(-let* (((&alist "foo" foo "bar" bar) (list (cons "foo" 1) (cons "bar" (list 'a 'b 'c)))) ((a b c) bar)) (list foo a b c bar)) ;; => '(1 a b c (a b c))
Return a lambda which destructures its input as match-form
and executes body
.
Note that you have to enclose the match-form
in a pair of parens,
such that:
(-lambda (x) body)
(-lambda (x y ...) body)
has the usual semantics of lambda
. Furthermore, these get
translated into normal lambda, so there is no performance
penalty.
See -let
for the description of destructuring mechanism.
(-map (-lambda ((x y)) (+ x y)) '((1 2) (3 4) (5 6))) ;; => '(3 7 11)
(-map (-lambda ([x y]) (+ x y)) '([1 2] [3 4] [5 6])) ;; => '(3 7 11)
(funcall (-lambda ((_ . a) (_ . b)) (-concat a b)) '(1 2 3) '(4 5 6)) ;; => '(2 3 5 6)
Functions iterating over lists for side-effect only.
Call fn
with every item in list
. Return nil, used for side-effects only.
(let (s) (-each '(1 2 3) (lambda (item) (setq s (cons item s))))) ;; => nil
(let (s) (-each '(1 2 3) (lambda (item) (setq s (cons item s)))) s) ;; => '(3 2 1)
(let (s) (--each '(1 2 3) (setq s (cons it s))) s) ;; => '(3 2 1)
Call fn
with every item in list
while (pred
item) is non-nil.
Return nil, used for side-effects only.
(let (s) (-each-while '(2 4 5 6) 'even? (lambda (item) (!cons item s))) s) ;; => '(4 2)
(let (s) (--each-while '(1 2 3 4) (< it 3) (!cons it s)) s) ;; => '(2 1)
Call (fn
index item) for each item in list
.
In the anaphoric form --each-indexed
, the index is exposed as symbol it-index
.
See also: -map-indexed
.
(let (s) (-each-indexed '(a b c) (lambda (index item) (setq s (cons (list item index) s)))) s) ;; => '((c 2) (b 1) (a 0))
(let (s) (--each-indexed '(a b c) (setq s (cons (list it it-index) s))) s) ;; => '((c 2) (b 1) (a 0))
Repeatedly calls fn
(presumably for side-effects) passing in integers from 0 through num-1
.
(let (s) (-dotimes 3 (lambda (n) (!cons n s))) s) ;; => '(2 1 0)
(let (s) (--dotimes 5 (!cons it s)) s) ;; => '(4 3 2 1 0)
Eval a form, then insert that form as the 2nd argument to other forms.
The eval-initial-value
form is evaluated once. Its result is
passed to forms
, which are then evaluated sequentially. Returns
the target form.
(-doto '(1 2 3) (!cdr) (!cdr)) ;; => '(3)
(-doto '(1 . 2) (setcar 3) (setcdr 4)) ;; => '(3 . 4)
Destructive: Set cdr
to the cons of car
and cdr
.
(let (l) (!cons 5 l) l) ;; => '(5)
(let ((l '(3))) (!cons 5 l) l) ;; => '(5 3)
Destructive: Set list
to the cdr of list
.
(let ((l '(3))) (!cdr l) l) ;; => '()
(let ((l '(3 5))) (!cdr l) l) ;; => '(5)
These combinators require Emacs 24 for its lexical scope. So they are offered in a separate package: dash-functional
.
Takes a function fn
and fewer than the normal arguments to fn
,
and returns a fn that takes a variable number of additional args
.
When called, the returned function calls fn
with args
first and
then additional args.
(funcall (-partial '- 5) 3) ;; => 2
(funcall (-partial '+ 5 2) 3) ;; => 10
Takes a function fn
and fewer than the normal arguments to fn
,
and returns a fn that takes a variable number of additional args
.
When called, the returned function calls fn
with the additional
args first and then args
.
(funcall (-rpartial '- 5) 8) ;; => 3
(funcall (-rpartial '- 5 2) 10) ;; => 3
Takes a list of functions and returns a fn that is the juxtaposition of those fns. The returned fn takes a variable number of args, and returns a list containing the result of applying each fn to the args (left-to-right).
(funcall (-juxt '+ '-) 3 5) ;; => '(8 -2)
(-map (-juxt 'identity 'square) '(1 2 3)) ;; => '((1 1) (2 4) (3 9))
Takes a list of functions and returns a fn that is the composition of those fns. The returned fn takes a variable number of arguments, and returns the result of applying each fn to the result of applying the previous fn to the arguments (right-to-left).
(funcall (-compose 'square '+) 2 3) ;; => (square (+ 2 3))
(funcall (-compose 'identity 'square) 3) ;; => (square 3)
(funcall (-compose 'square 'identity) 3) ;; => (square 3)
Changes an n-arity function fn
to a 1-arity function that
expects a list with n items as arguments
(-map (-applify '+) '((1 1 1) (1 2 3) (5 5 5))) ;; => '(3 6 15)
(-map (-applify (lambda (a b c) (\` ((\, a) ((\, b) ((\, c))))))) '((1 1 1) (1 2 3) (5 5 5))) ;; => '((1 (1 (1))) (1 (2 (3))) (5 (5 (5))))
(funcall (-applify '<) '(3 6)) ;; => t
Return a function of two arguments that first applies
transformer
to each of them and then applies operator
on the
results (in the same order).
In types: (b -> b -> c) -> (a -> b) -> a -> a -> c
(-sort (-on '< 'length) '((1 2 3) (1) (1 2))) ;; => '((1) (1 2) (1 2 3))
(-min-by (-on '> 'length) '((1 2 3) (4) (1 2))) ;; => '(4)
(-min-by (-on 'string-lessp 'int-to-string) '(2 100 22)) ;; => 22
Swap the order of arguments for binary function func
.
In types: (a -> b -> c) -> b -> a -> c
(funcall (-flip '<) 2 1) ;; => t
(funcall (-flip '-) 3 8) ;; => 5
(-sort (-flip '<) '(4 3 6 1)) ;; => '(6 4 3 1)
Return a function that returns c
ignoring any additional arguments.
In types: a -> b -> a
(funcall (-const 2) 1 3 "foo") ;; => 2
(-map (-const 1) '("a" "b" "c" "d")) ;; => '(1 1 1 1)
(-sum (-map (-const 1) '("a" "b" "c" "d"))) ;; => 4
Take n-ary function and n arguments and specialize some of them. Arguments denoted by <> will be left unspecialized.
See srfi-26
for detailed description.
(funcall (-cut list 1 <> 3 <> 5) 2 4) ;; => '(1 2 3 4 5)
(-map (-cut funcall <> 5) '(1+ 1- (lambda (x) (/ 1.0 x)))) ;; => '(6 4 0.2)
(-map (-cut <> 1 2 3) (list 'list 'vector 'string)) ;; => '((1 2 3) [1 2 3] "���")
Take a unary predicate pred
and return a unary predicate
that returns t if pred
returns nil and nil if pred
returns
non-nil.
(funcall (-not 'even?) 5) ;; => t
(-filter (-not (-partial '< 4)) '(1 2 3 4 5 6 7 8)) ;; => '(1 2 3 4)
Take list of unary predicates preds
and return a unary
predicate with argument x that returns non-nil if at least one of
the preds
returns non-nil on x.
In types: [a -> Bool] -> a -> Bool
(-filter (-orfn 'even? (-partial (-flip '<) 5)) '(1 2 3 4 5 6 7 8 9 10)) ;; => '(1 2 3 4 6 8 10)
(funcall (-orfn 'stringp 'even?) "foo") ;; => t
Take list of unary predicates preds
and return a unary
predicate with argument x that returns non-nil if all of the
preds
returns non-nil on x.
In types: [a -> Bool] -> a -> Bool
(funcall (-andfn (-cut < <> 10) 'even?) 6) ;; => t
(funcall (-andfn (-cut < <> 10) 'even?) 12) ;; => nil
(-filter (-andfn (-not 'even?) (-cut >= 5 <>)) '(1 2 3 4 5 6 7 8 9 10)) ;; => '(1 3 5)
Return a function fn
composed n
times with itself.
fn
is a unary function. If you need to use a function of higher
arity, use -applify
first to turn it into a unary function.
With n = 0, this acts as identity function.
In types: (a -> a) -> Int -> a -> a.
This function satisfies the following law:
(funcall (-iteratefn fn n) init) = (-last-item (-iterate fn init (1+ n))).
(funcall (-iteratefn (lambda (x) (* x x)) 3) 2) ;; => 256
(funcall (-iteratefn '1+ 3) 1) ;; => 4
(funcall (-iteratefn 'cdr 3) '(1 2 3 4 5)) ;; => '(4 5)
Return a function that computes the (least) fixpoint of fn
.
fn
must be a unary function. The returned lambda takes a single
argument, x
, the initial value for the fixpoint iteration. The
iteration halts when either of the following conditions is satisified:
-
Iteration converges to the fixpoint, with equality being tested using
equal-test
. Ifequal-test
is not specified,equal
is used. For functions over the floating point numbers, it may be necessary to provide an appropriate appoximate comparsion test. -
halt-test
returns a non-nil value.halt-test
defaults to a simple counter that returns t after-fixfn-max-iterations
, to guard against infinite iteration. Otherwise,halt-test
must be a function that accepts a single argument, the current value ofx
, and returns non-nil as long as iteration should continue. In this way, a more sophisticated convergence test may be supplied by the caller.
The return value of the lambda is either the fixpoint or, if
iteration halted before converging, a cons with car halted
and
cdr the final output from halt-test
.
In types: (a -> a) -> a -> a.
(funcall (-fixfn 'cos 'approx-equal) 0.7) ;; ~> 0.7390851332151607
(funcall (-fixfn (lambda (x) (expt (+ x 10) 0.25))) 2.0) ;; => 1.8555845286409378
(funcall (-fixfn 'sin 'approx-equal) 0.1) ;; => '(halted . t)
Take a list of n functions and return a function that takes a list of length n, applying i-th function to i-th element of the input list. Returns a list of length n.
In types (for n=2): ((a -> b), (c -> d)) -> (a, c) -> (b, d)
This function satisfies the following laws:
(-compose (-prodfn f g ...) (-prodfn f' g' ...)) = (-prodfn (-compose f f') (-compose g g') ...)
(-prodfn f g ...) = (-juxt (-compose f (-partial 'nth 0)) (-compose g (-partial 'nth 1)) ...)
(-compose (-prodfn f g ...) (-juxt f' g' ...)) = (-juxt (-compose f f') (-compose g g') ...)
(-compose (-partial 'nth n) (-prod f1 f2 ...)) = (-compose fn (-partial 'nth n))
(funcall (-prodfn '1+ '1- 'int-to-string) '(1 2 3)) ;; => '(2 1 "3")
(-map (-prodfn '1+ '1-) '((1 2) (3 4) (5 6) (7 8))) ;; => '((2 1) (4 3) (6 5) (8 7))
(apply '+ (funcall (-prodfn 'length 'string-to-number) '((1 2 3) "15"))) ;; => 18
Yes, please do. Pure functions in the list manipulation realm only,
please. There's a suite of tests in dev/examples.el
, so remember to add
tests for your function, or I might break it later.
You'll find the repo at:
https://github.com/magnars/dash.el
Run the tests with
./run-tests.sh
Create the docs with
./create-docs.sh
I highly recommend that you install these as a pre-commit hook, so that the tests are always running and the docs are always in sync:
cp pre-commit.sh .git/hooks/pre-commit
Oh, and don't edit README.md
directly, it is auto-generated.
Change readme-template.md
or examples-to-docs.el
instead.
This release retires Emacs 23 support. We will still try to keep things compatible but no future guarantees are made.
- Added edebug support for threading macros (@Wilfred)
- Added
-unzip
- Added gv setters for
-first-item
and-last-item
- Added
-powerset
and-permutations
(@holomorph) - Added
-as->
for threading a named variable (@zck) - Added
-partition-after-pred
,-partition-before-pred
,-partition-after-item
,-partition-before-item
(@zck) - Fixed a bug in
-any-p
and friends testing fornull
on lists containingnil
(#239) - Fixed infinite loop bug in
-zip
and-interleave
when called with empty input. - Added
-second-item
through to-fifth-item
as an alternative tonth
(@Wilfred) - Added
-tails
and-inits
- Added
-running-sum
and-running-product
- Added
-reductions[-r][-from]
family of functions (like-reduce
but collecting intermediate results) - Added
-common-prefix
(@basil-conto)
-let
now supports&alist
in destructuring.- Various performance improvements.
-zip
will change in future so it always returns lists. Added-zip-pair
for users who explicitly want the old behavior.- Added lexical binding pragma to dash.el, fixes #130 in Emacs 24+.
- Added
-select-column
and-select-columns
. - Fixed an issue with
-map-last
and--remove-last
where they modified their inputs (#158). - Added
-each-indexed
and--each-indexed
. - Added
-take-last
and-drop-last
. - Added
-doto
macro. -cut <>
is now treated as a function, consistent with SRFI 26 (#185)
- Add GNU ELPA support. (Phillip Lord)
- Add
-some->
,-some->>
, and-some-->
macros. (Cam Saul) -is-suffix?
no longer destroys input list.- Faster hashtable implementation for
-union
. - Improvements to docstrings and examples
- Lots of clean up wrt byte compilation, debug macros and tests
- Add
-let
destructuring to-if-let
and-when-let
(Fredrik Bergroth)
- Add
-let
,-let*
and-lambda
with destructuring - Add
-tree-seq
and-tree-map-nodes
- Add
-non-nil
- Add
-fix
- Add
-fixfn
(dash-functional 1.2) - Add
-copy
(Wilfred Hughes)
- Add
-butlast
-zip
now supports more than two lists (Steve Lamb)- Add
-cycle
,-pad
,-annotate
,-zip-fill
(Steve Lamb) - Add
-table
,-table-flat
(finite cartesian product) - Add
-flatten-n
-slice
now supports "step" argument- Add functional combinators
-iteratefn
,-prodfn
- Add
-replace
,-splice
,-splice-list
which generalize-replace-at
and-insert-at
- Add
-compose
,-iteratefn
and-prodfn
(dash-functional 1.1)
- Add
-is-prefix-p
,-is-suffix-p
,-is-infix-p
(Matus Goljer) - Add
-iterate
,-unfold
(Matus Goljer) - Add
-split-on
,-split-when
(Matus Goljer) - Add
-find-last-index
(Matus Goljer) - Add
-list
(Johan Andersson)
- Add
-same-items?
(Johan Andersson) - A few bugfixes
- Add
-snoc
(Matus Goljer) - Add
-replace-at
,-update-at
,-remove-at
, and-remove-at-indices
(Matus Goljer)
- Add tree operations (Matus Goljer)
- Make font-lock optional
- Add
-compose
(Christina Whyte)
- Add indexing operations (Matus Goljer)
- Split out
dash-functional.el
(Matus Goljer) - Add
-andfn
,-orfn
,-not
,-cut
,-const
,-flip
and-on
. (Matus Goljer) - Fix
-min
,-max
,-min-by
and-max-by
(Matus Goljer)
- Add
-first-item
and-last-item
(Wilfred Hughes)
- Add
-rotate
(Matus Goljer)
- Add
-min
,-max
,-min-by
and-max-by
(Johan Andersson)
- Add
-sum
and-product
(Johan Andersson)
- Add
-sort
- Add
-reduce-r
(Matus Goljer) - Add
-reduce-r-from
(Matus Goljer)
- Add
-partition-in-steps
- Add
-partition-all-in-steps
- Add
-last
(Matus Goljer) - Add
-insert-at
(Emanuel Evans) - Add
-when-let
and-if-let
(Emanuel Evans) - Add
-when-let*
and-if-let*
(Emanuel Evans) - Some bugfixes
- Matus Goljer contributed lots of features and functions.
- Takafumi Arakaki contributed
-group-by
. - tali713 is the author of
-applify
. - Víctor M. Valenzuela contributed
-repeat
. - Nic Ferrier contributed
-cons*
. - Wilfred Hughes contributed
-slice
,-first-item
and-last-item
. - Emanuel Evans contributed
-if-let
,-when-let
and-insert-at
. - Johan Andersson contributed
-sum
,-product
and-same-items?
- Christina Whyte contributed
-compose
- Steve Lamb contributed
-cycle
,-pad
,-annotate
,-zip-fill
and an n-ary version of-zip
. - Fredrik Bergroth made the
-if-let
family use-let
destructuring and improved script for generating documentation. - Mark Oteiza contributed the script to create an info manual.
- Vasilij Schneidermann contributed
-some
. - William West made
-fixfn
more robust at handling floats. - Cam Saül contributed
-some->
,-some->>
, and-some-->
. - Basil L. Contovounesios contributed
-common-prefix
.
Thanks!
New contributors are welcome. To ensure that dash.el can be distributed with ELPA or Emacs, we would request that all contributors assign copyright to the Free Software Foundation.
Copyright (C) 2012-2016 Free Software Foundation, Inc.
Authors: Magnar Sveen magnars@gmail.com Keywords: lists
This program is free software; you can redistribute it and/or modify it under the terms of the GNU General Public License as published by the Free Software Foundation, either version 3 of the License, or (at your option) any later version.
This program is distributed in the hope that it will be useful, but WITHOUT ANY WARRANTY; without even the implied warranty of MERCHANTABILITY or FITNESS FOR A PARTICULAR PURPOSE. See the GNU General Public License for more details.
You should have received a copy of the GNU General Public License along with this program. If not, see http://www.gnu.org/licenses/.