# | Filter Extensions # # This module implements extensions to the `filters` commands # # They are prefixed with `iter` so as to avoid conflicts with # the inbuilt filters # Returns the first element of the list that matches the # closure predicate, `null` otherwise # # # Invariant # > The closure has to be a predicate (returning a bool value) # > else `null` is returned # > The closure also has to be valid for the types it receives # > These will be flagged as errors later as closure annotations # > are implemented # # # Example # ``` # use std ["assert equal" "iter find"] # # let haystack = ["shell", "abc", "around", "nushell", "std"] # # let found = ($haystack | iter find {|it| $it starts-with "a" }) # let not_found = ($haystack | iter find {|it| $it mod 2 == 0}) # # assert equal $found "abc" # assert equal $not_found null # ``` export def find [ # -> any | null fn: closure # the closure used to perform the search ] { try { filter $fn | get 0? } catch { null } } # Returns the index of the first element that matches the predicate or # -1 if none # # # Invariant # > The closure has to return a bool # # # Example # ```nu # use std ["assert equal" "iter find-index"] # # let res = ( # ["iter", "abc", "shell", "around", "nushell", "std"] # | iter find-index {|x| $x starts-with 's'} # ) # assert equal $res 2 # # let is_even = {|x| $x mod 2 == 0} # let res = ([3 5 13 91] | iter find-index $is_even) # assert equal $res -1 # ``` export def find-index [ # -> int fn: closure # the closure used to perform the search ] { let matches = ( enumerate | each {|it| if (do $fn $it.item) { $it.index } } ) if ($matches | is-empty) { -1 } else { $matches | first } } # Returns a new list with the separator between adjacent # items of the original list # # # Example # ``` # use std ["assert equal" "iter intersperse"] # # let res = ([1 2 3 4] | iter intersperse 0) # assert equal $res [1 0 2 0 3 0 4] # ``` export def intersperse [ # -> list separator: any # the separator to be used ] { reduce --fold [] {|it, acc| $acc ++ [$it, $separator] } | match $in { [] => [], $xs => ($xs | take (($xs | length) - 1 )) } } # Returns a list of intermediate steps performed by `reduce` # (`fold`). It takes two arguments, an initial value to seed the # initial state and a closure that takes two arguments, the first # being the internal state and the second the list element in the # current iteration. # # # Example # ``` # use std ["assert equal" "iter scan"] # let scanned = ([1 2 3] | iter scan 0 {|x, y| $x + $y}) # # assert equal $scanned [0, 1, 3, 6] # # # use the --noinit(-n) flag to remove the initial value from # # the final result # let scanned = ([1 2 3] | iter scan 0 {|x, y| $x + $y} -n) # # assert equal $scanned [1, 3, 6] # ``` export def scan [ # -> list init: any # initial value to seed the initial state fn: closure # the closure to perform the scan --noinit(-n) # remove the initial value from the result ] { reduce --fold [$init] {|it, acc| $acc ++ [(do $fn ($acc | last) $it)] } | if $noinit { $in | skip } else { $in } } # Returns a list of values for which the supplied closure does not # return `null` or an error. It is equivalent to # `$in | each $fn | filter $fn` # # # Example # ```nu # use std ["assert equal" "iter filter-map"] # # let res = ([2 5 "4" 7] | iter filter-map {|it| $it ** 2}) # # assert equal $res [4 25 49] # ``` export def filter-map [ # -> list fn: closure # the closure to apply to the input ] { each {|$it| try { do $fn $it } catch { null } } | filter {|it| $it != null } } # Maps a closure to each nested structure and flattens the result # # # Example # ```nu # use std ["assert equal" "iter flat-map"] # # let res = ( # [[1 2 3] [2 3 4] [5 6 7]] | iter flat-map {|it| $it | math sum} # ) # assert equal $res [6 9 18] # ``` export def flat-map [ # -> list fn: closure # the closure to map to the nested structures ] { each {|it| do $fn $it } | flatten } # Zips two structures and applies a closure to each of the zips # # # Example # ```nu # use std ["assert equal" "iter iter zip-with"] # # let res = ( # [1 2 3] | iter zip-with [2 3 4] {|a, b| $a + $b } # ) # # assert equal $res [3 5 7] # ``` export def zip-with [ # -> list other: any # the structure to zip with fn: closure # the closure to apply to the zips ] { zip $other | each {|it| reduce {|it, acc| do $fn $acc $it } } } # Zips two lists and returns a record with the first list as headers # # # Example # ```nu # use std ["assert equal" "iter iter zip-into-record"] # # let res = ( # [1 2 3] | iter zip-into-record [2 3 4] # ) # # assert equal $res [ # [1 2 3]; # [2 3 4] # ] # ``` export def zip-into-record [ # -> table other: list # the values to zip with ] { into record | append ($other | into record) | headers }