| Safe Haskell | Trustworthy |
|---|---|
| Language | Haskell2010 |
Data.Monoid.Factorial
Description
This module defines the FactorialMonoid class and some of its instances.
Synopsis
- module Data.Semigroup.Factorial
- class (Factorial m, MonoidNull m) => FactorialMonoid m where
- splitPrimePrefix :: m -> Maybe (m, m)
- splitPrimeSuffix :: m -> Maybe (m, m)
- inits :: m -> [m]
- tails :: m -> [m]
- span :: (m -> Bool) -> m -> (m, m)
- break :: (m -> Bool) -> m -> (m, m)
- split :: (m -> Bool) -> m -> [m]
- takeWhile :: (m -> Bool) -> m -> m
- dropWhile :: (m -> Bool) -> m -> m
- spanMaybe :: s -> (s -> m -> Maybe s) -> m -> (m, m, s)
- spanMaybe' :: s -> (s -> m -> Maybe s) -> m -> (m, m, s)
- splitAt :: Int -> m -> (m, m)
- drop :: Int -> m -> m
- take :: Int -> m -> m
- type StableFactorialMonoid m = (StableFactorial m, FactorialMonoid m, PositiveMonoid m)
Documentation
module Data.Semigroup.Factorial
class (Factorial m, MonoidNull m) => FactorialMonoid m where Source #
Class of monoids that can be split into irreducible (i.e., atomic or prime) factors in a unique way. Factors of
a Product are literally its prime factors:
factors (Product 12) == [Product 2, Product 2, Product 3]
Factors of a list are not its elements but all its single-item sublists:
factors "abc" == ["a", "b", "c"]
The methods of this class satisfy the following laws in addition to those of Factorial:
null == List.null . factors
factors == unfoldr splitPrimePrefix == List.reverse . unfoldr (fmap swap . splitPrimeSuffix)
reverse == mconcat . List.reverse . factors
primePrefix == maybe mempty fst . splitPrimePrefix
primeSuffix == maybe mempty snd . splitPrimeSuffix
inits == List.map mconcat . List.inits . factors
tails == List.map mconcat . List.tails . factors
span p m == (mconcat l, mconcat r) where (l, r) = List.span p (factors m)
List.all (List.all (not . pred) . factors) . split pred
mconcat . intersperse prime . split (== prime) == id
splitAt i m == (mconcat l, mconcat r) where (l, r) = List.splitAt i (factors m)
spanMaybe () (const $ bool Nothing (Maybe ()) . p) m == (takeWhile p m, dropWhile p m, ())
spanMaybe s0 (\s m-> Just $ f s m) m0 == (m0, mempty, foldl f s0 m0)
let (prefix, suffix, s') = spanMaybe s f m
foldMaybe = foldl g (Just s)
g s m = s >>= flip f m
in all ((Nothing ==) . foldMaybe) (inits prefix)
&& prefix == last (filter (isJust . foldMaybe) $ inits m)
&& Just s' == foldMaybe prefix
&& m == prefix <> suffixA minimal instance definition should implement splitPrimePrefix for performance reasons, and other methods where
beneficial.
Minimal complete definition
Nothing
Methods
splitPrimePrefix :: m -> Maybe (m, m) Source #
splitPrimeSuffix :: m -> Maybe (m, m) Source #
Returns the list of all prefixes of the argument, mempty first.
Returns the list of all suffixes of the argument, mempty last.
span :: (m -> Bool) -> m -> (m, m) Source #
break :: (m -> Bool) -> m -> (m, m) Source #
split :: (m -> Bool) -> m -> [m] Source #
Splits the monoid into components delimited by prime separators satisfying the given predicate. The primes satisfying the predicate are not a part of the result.
takeWhile :: (m -> Bool) -> m -> m Source #
dropWhile :: (m -> Bool) -> m -> m Source #
spanMaybe :: s -> (s -> m -> Maybe s) -> m -> (m, m, s) Source #
spanMaybe' :: s -> (s -> m -> Maybe s) -> m -> (m, m, s) Source #
Strict version of spanMaybe.
splitAt :: Int -> m -> (m, m) Source #
Instances
type StableFactorialMonoid m = (StableFactorial m, FactorialMonoid m, PositiveMonoid m) Source #
Deprecated: Use Data.Semigroup.Factorial.StableFactorial instead.