Equivalent to take, but will throw an exception if fewer than n items
are encountered in xs.
repeatedly(f, [n])
Call a function n times, or infinitely if n is omitted.
Example:
for t inrepeatedly(time_ns, 3)
@show t
end
t = 0x0000592ff83caf87
t = 0x0000592ff83d8cf4
t = 0x0000592ff83dd11e
chain(xs...)
Iterate through any number of iterators in sequence.
Example:
for i inchain(1:3, ['a', 'b', 'c'])
@show i
end
i = 1
i = 2
i = 3
i = 'a'
i = 'b'
i = 'c'
product(xs...)
Iterate over all combinations in the cartesian product of the inputs.
Example:
for p inproduct(1:3,1:2)
@show p
end
yields
p = (1,1)
p = (2,1)
p = (3,1)
p = (1,2)
p = (2,2)
p = (3,2)
distinct(xs)
Iterate through values skipping over those already encountered.
Example:
for i indistinct([1,1,2,1,2,4,1,2,3,4])
@show i
end
i = 1
i = 2
i = 4
i = 3
nth(xs, n)
Return the n'th element of xs. Mostly useful for non indexable collections.
Example:
nth(1:3, 3)
3
takenth(xs, n)
Iterate through every n'th element of xs
Example:
collect(takenth(5:15,3))
3-element Array{Int32,1}:
7
10
13
partition(xs, n, [step])
Group values into n-tuples.
Example:
for i inpartition(1:9, 3)
@show i
end
i = (1,2,3)
i = (4,5,6)
i = (7,8,9)
If the step parameter is set, each tuple is separated by step values.
Example:
for i inpartition(1:9, 3, 2)
@show i
end
i = (1,2,3)
i = (3,4,5)
i = (5,6,7)
i = (7,8,9)
groupby(f, xs)
Group consecutive values that share the same result of applying f.
Example:
for i ingroupby(x -> x[1], ["face", "foo", "bar", "book", "baz", "zzz"])
@show i
end
i = ASCIIString["face","foo"]
i = ASCIIString["bar","book","baz"]
i = ASCIIString["zzz"]
imap(f, xs1, [xs2, ...])
Iterate over values of a function applied to successive values from one or
more iterators.
Example:
for i inimap(+, [1,2,3], [4,5,6])
@show i
end
i = 5
i = 7
i = 9
subsets(xs)
Iterate over every subset of a collection xs.
Example:
for i insubsets([1,2,3])
@show i
end
i = []
i = [1]
i = [2]
i = [1,2]
i = [3]
i = [1,3]
i = [2,3]
i = [1,2,3]
subsets(xs, k)
Iterate over every subset of size k from a collection xs.
Example:
for i insubsets([1,2,3],2)
@show i
end
i = [1,2]
i = [1,3]
i = [2,3]
peekiter(xs)
Add possibility to peek head element of an iterator without updating the state.
Example:
it =peekiter(["face", "foo", "bar", "book", "baz", "zzz"])
s =start(it)
@showpeek(it, s)
@showpeek(it, s)
x, s =next(it, s)
@show x
@showpeek(it, s)
peek(it,s) = Nullable("face")
peek(it,s) = Nullable("face") # no change
x = "face"
peek(it,s) = Nullable("foo")
ncycle(xs,n)
Cycles through an iterator n times
Example:
for i inncycle(1:3, 2)
@show i
end
i = 1
i = 2
i = 3
i = 1
i = 2
i = 3
iterate(f, x)
Iterate over successive applications of f, as in f(x), f(f(x)), f(f(f(x))), ....
Example:
for i intake(iterate(x ->2x, 1), 5)
@show i
end
i = 1
i = 2
i = 4
i = 8
i = 16
The @itr macro for automatic inlining in for loops
Using functional iterators is powerful and concise, but may incur in some
overhead, and manually inlining the operations can typically improve
performance in critical parts of the code. The @itr macro is provided to do
that automatically in some cases. Its usage is trivial: for example, given this code:
for (x,y) in zip(a,b)
@show x,y
end
the automatically inlined version can be obtained by simply doing:
@itr for (x,y) in zip(a,b)
@show x,y
end
This typically results in faster code, but its applicability has limitations:
it only works with for loops;
if multiple nested iterators are used, only the outermost is affected by the
transformation;
explicit expressions are required (i.e. when a Tuple is expected, an
explicit tuple must be provided, a tuple variable won't be accepted);
splicing is not supported;
multidimensional loops (i.e. expressions such as for x in a, y in b) are
not supported
The @itr macro can be used with the following supported iterators:
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