4.14.1 Sequences
Sequence Constructors in The Racket Guide introduces sequences.
A sequence encapsulates an ordered collection of values. The elements of a sequence can be extracted with one of the for syntactic forms, with the procedures returned by sequence-generate, or by converting the sequence into a stream.
The sequence datatype overlaps with many other datatypes. Among built-in datatypes, the sequence datatype includes the following:
exact nonnegative integers (see below)
strings (see Strings)
byte strings (see Byte Strings)
lists (see Pairs and Lists)
mutable lists (see Mutable Pairs and Lists)
vectors (see Vectors)
flvectors (see Flonum Vectors)
fxvectors (see Fixnum Vectors)
hash tables (see Hash Tables)
dictionaries (see Dictionaries)
sets (see Sets)
input ports (see Ports)
streams (see Streams)
An exact number k that is a non-negative integer acts as a sequence similar to (in-range k), except that k by itself is not a stream.
Custom sequences can be defined using structure type properties. The easiest method to define a custom sequence is to use the gen:stream generic interface. Streams are a suitable abstraction for data structures that are directly iterable. For example, a list is directly iterable with first and rest. On the other hand, vectors are not directly iterable: iteration has to go through an index. For data structures that are not directly iterable, the iterator for the data structure can be defined to be a stream (e.g., a structure containing the index of a vector).
For example, unrolled linked lists (represented as a list of vectors) themselves do not fit the stream abstraction, but have index-based iterators that can be represented as streams:
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The prop:sequence property provides more flexibility in specifying iteration, such as when a pre-processing step is needed to prepare the data for iteration. The make-do-sequence function creates a sequence given a thunk that returns procedures to implement a sequence, and the prop:sequence property can be associated with a structure type to implement its implicit conversion to a sequence.
For most sequence types, extracting elements from a sequence has no side-effect on the original sequence value; for example, extracting the sequence of elements from a list does not change the list. For other sequence types, each extraction implies a side effect; for example, extracting the sequence of bytes from a port causes the bytes to be read from the port. A sequence’s state may either span all uses of the sequence, as for a port, or it may be confined to each distinct time that a sequence is initiated by a for form, sequence->stream, sequence-generate, or sequence-generate*. Concretely, the thunk passed to make-do-sequence is called to initiate the sequence each time the sequence is used.
Individual elements of a sequence typically correspond to single
values, but an element may also correspond to multiple values. For
example, a hash table generates two values—
4.14.1.1 Sequence Predicate and Constructors
> (sequence? 42) #t
> (sequence? '(a b c)) #t
> (sequence? "word") #t
> (sequence? #\x) #f
procedure
end : number? (in-range start end [step]) → stream? start : number? end : number? step : number? = 1
procedure
(in-naturals [start]) → stream?
start : exact-nonnegative-integer? = 0
> (for/list ([k (in-naturals)] [x (in-range 10)]) (list k x)) '((0 0) (1 1) (2 2) (3 3) (4 4) (5 5) (6 6) (7 7) (8 8) (9 9))
See Pairs and Lists for information on using lists as sequences.
> (for/list ([x (in-list '(3 1 4))]) `(,x ,(* x x))) '((3 9) (1 1) (4 16))
See Mutable Pairs and Lists for information on using mutable lists as sequences.
> (for/list ([x (in-mlist (mcons "RACKET" (mcons "LANG" '())))]) (string-length x)) '(6 4)
procedure
vec : vector? start : exact-nonnegative-integer? = 0 stop : (or/c exact-integer? #f) = #f step : (and/c exact-integer? (not/c zero?)) = 1
See Vectors for information on using vectors as sequences.
The optional arguments start, stop, and step are analogous to in-range, except that a #f value for stop is equivalent to (vector-length vec). That is, the first element in the sequence is (vector-ref vec start), and each successive element is generated by adding step to index of the previous element. The sequence stops before an index that would be greater or equal to end if step is non-negative, or less or equal to end if step is negative.
If start is not a valid index, or stop is not in [-1, (vector-length vec)] then the exn:fail:contract exception is raised. If start is less than stop and step is negative, then the exn:fail:contract:mismatch exception is raised. Similarly, if start is more than stop and step is positive, then the exn:fail:contract:mismatch exception is raised.
An in-vector application can provide better performance for vector iteration when it appears directly in a for clause.
> (define (histogram vector-of-words) (define a-hash (hash)) (for ([word (in-vector vector-of-words)]) (hash-set! a-hash word (add1 (hash-ref a-hash word 0)))) a-hash)
> (histogram #("hello" "world" "hello" "sunshine")) hash-set!: contract violation
expected: (and/c hash? (not/c immutable?))
given: '#hash()
argument position: 1st
other arguments...:
"hello"
1
procedure
str : string? start : exact-nonnegative-integer? = 0 stop : (or/c exact-integer? #f) = #f step : (and/c exact-integer? (not/c zero?)) = 1
See Strings for information on using strings as sequences.
The optional arguments start, stop, and step are as in in-vector.
An in-string application can provide better performance for string iteration when it appears directly in a for clause.
> (define (line-count str) (for/sum ([ch (in-string str)]) (if (char=? #\newline ch) 1 0)))
> (line-count "this string\nhas\nthree \nnewlines") 3
procedure
bstr : bytes? start : exact-nonnegative-integer? = 0 stop : (or/c exact-integer? #f) = #f step : (and/c exact-integer? (not/c zero?)) = 1
See Byte Strings for information on using byte strings as sequences.
The optional arguments start, stop, and step are as in in-vector.
An in-bytes application can provide better performance for byte string iteration when it appears directly in a for clause.
> (define (has-eof? bs) (for/or ([ch (in-bytes bs)]) (= ch 0)))
> (has-eof? #"this byte string has an \0embedded zero byte") #t
> (has-eof? #"this byte string does not") #f
procedure
r : (input-port? . -> . any/c) = read in : input-port? = (current-input-port)
procedure
(in-input-port-bytes in) → sequence?
in : input-port?
procedure
(in-input-port-chars in) → sequence?
in : input-port?
procedure
in : input-port? = (current-input-port)
mode : (or/c 'linefeed 'return 'return-linefeed 'any 'any-one) = 'any
procedure
(in-bytes-lines [in mode]) → sequence?
in : input-port? = (current-input-port)
mode : (or/c 'linefeed 'return 'return-linefeed 'any 'any-one) = 'any
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See Hash Tables for information on using hash tables as sequences.
procedure
(in-hash-keys hash) → sequence?
hash : hash?
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procedure
(in-hash-values hash) → sequence?
hash : hash?
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procedure
(in-hash-pairs hash) → sequence?
hash : hash?
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procedure
(in-directory [dir use-dir?]) → sequence?
dir : (or/c #f path-string?) = #f
use-dir? : ((and/c path? complete-path?) . -> . any/c) = (lambda (dir-path) #t)
An in-directory sequence traverses nested subdirectories recursively (filtered by use-dir?). To generate a sequence that includes only the immediate content of a directory, use the result of directory-list as a sequence.
Changed in version 6.0.0.1 of package base: Added use-dir? argument.
procedure
(in-producer producer) → sequence?
producer : procedure? (in-producer producer stop arg ...) → sequence? producer : procedure? stop : any/c arg : any/c
If a stop value is not given, the sequence goes on infinitely, and therefore it common to use it with a finite sequence or using #:break etc. If a stop value is given, it is used to identify a value that marks the end of the sequence (and the stop value is not included in the sequence); stop can be a predicate that is applied to the results of producer, or it can be a value that is tested against the result of with eq?. (The stop argument must be a predicate if the stop value is itself a function or if producer returns multiple values.)
If additional args are specified, they are passed to every call to producer.
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procedure
(in-indexed seq) → sequence?
seq : sequence?
procedure
(in-sequences seq ...) → sequence?
seq : sequence?
procedure
(in-parallel seq ...) → sequence?
seq : sequence?
procedure
(in-values-sequence seq) → sequence?
seq : sequence?
procedure
(in-values*-sequence seq) → sequence?
seq : sequence?
procedure
(make-do-sequence thunk) → sequence?
thunk :
(-> (values (any/c . -> . any) (any/c . -> . any/c) any/c (or/c (any/c . -> . any/c) #f) (or/c (() () #:rest list? . ->* . any/c) #f) (or/c ((any/c) () #:rest list? . ->* . any/c) #f)))
The first result is a pos->element procedure that takes the current position and returns the value(s) for the current element.
The second result is a next-pos procedure that takes the current position and returns the next position.
The third result is the initial position.
The fourth result is a continue-with-pos? function that takes the current position and returns a true result if the sequence includes the value(s) for the current position, and false if the sequence should end instead of including the value(s). Alternatively, the fourth result can be #f to indicate that the sequence should always include the current value(s).
The fifth result is a continue-with-val? function that is like the fourth result, but it takes the current element value(s) instead of the current position. Alternatively, the fifth result can be #f to indicate that the sequence should always include the value(s) at the current position.
The sixth result is a continue-after-pos+val? procedure that takes both the current position and the current element value(s) and determines whether the sequence ends after the current element is already included in the sequence. Alternatively, the sixth result can be #f to indicate that the sequence can always continue after the current value(s).
Each of the procedures listed above is called only once per position. Among the last three procedures, as soon as one of the procedures returns #f, the sequence ends, and none are called again. Typically, one of the functions determines the end condition, and #f is used in place of the other two functions.
Using a pre-existing sequence:
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Using make-do-sequence:
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4.14.1.2 Sequence Conversion
procedure
(sequence->stream seq) → stream?
seq : sequence?
If extracting an element from seq involves a side-effect, then the effect is performed each time that either stream-first or stream-rest is first used to access or skip an element.
procedure
(sequence-generate* seq)
→
(or/c list? #f) (-> (values (or/c list? #f) procedure?)) seq : sequence?
4.14.1.3 Sequence Combinations
(require racket/sequence) | package: base |
value
procedure
(sequence->list s) → list?
s : sequence?
procedure
s : sequence?
procedure
(sequence-ref s i) → any
s : sequence? i : exact-nonnegative-integer?
procedure
(sequence-tail s i) → sequence?
s : sequence? i : exact-nonnegative-integer?
In case initiating s involves a side effect, the sequence s is not initiated until the resulting sequence is initiated, at which point the first i elements are extracted from the sequence.
procedure
(sequence-append s ...) → sequence?
s : sequence?
If all given ss are streams, the result is also a stream.
procedure
(sequence-map f s) → sequence?
f : procedure? s : sequence?
If s is a stream, then the result is also a stream.
procedure
f : procedure? s : sequence?
If s is a stream, then the result is also a stream.
procedure
(sequence-add-between s e) → sequence?
s : sequence? e : any/c
If s is a stream, then the result is also a stream.
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