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| author | Elena Bolshakova <lena-san@yandex-team.ru> | 2015-06-10 11:34:14 +0300 | 
|---|---|---|
| committer | Elena Bolshakova <lena-san@yandex-team.ru> | 2015-06-10 11:34:14 +0300 | 
| commit | 193f66553fc114e83e7c4cfb4607e4a1b57c4f09 (patch) | |
| tree | 30988e25d31ed6dff83cf409ad093c3c7ec9322c /haskell.html.markdown | |
| parent | 676568cca8731d0dbb2d2bdeff08cc092d283177 (diff) | |
| parent | 5086480a04d27cff2380f04609210082000538d4 (diff) | |
Merge branch 'master' of https://github.com/adambard/learnxinyminutes-docs
Diffstat (limited to 'haskell.html.markdown')
| -rw-r--r-- | haskell.html.markdown | 70 | 
1 files changed, 40 insertions, 30 deletions
| diff --git a/haskell.html.markdown b/haskell.html.markdown index 748a29da..6a64442f 100644 --- a/haskell.html.markdown +++ b/haskell.html.markdown @@ -59,6 +59,7 @@ not False -- True  "Hello " ++ "world!" -- "Hello world!"  -- A string is a list of characters +['H', 'e', 'l', 'l', 'o'] -- "Hello"  "This is a string" !! 0 -- 'T' @@ -67,10 +68,21 @@ not False -- True  ----------------------------------------------------  -- Every element in a list must have the same type. --- Two lists that are the same +-- These two lists are the same:  [1, 2, 3, 4, 5]  [1..5] +-- Ranges are versatile. +['A'..'F'] -- "ABCDEF" + +-- You can create a step in a range. +[0,2..10] -- [0, 2, 4, 6, 8, 10] +[5..1] -- This doesn't work because Haskell defaults to incrementing. +[5,4..1] -- [5, 4, 3, 2, 1] + +-- indexing into a list +[0..] !! 5 -- 5 +  -- You can also have infinite lists in Haskell!  [1..] -- a list of all the natural numbers @@ -90,9 +102,6 @@ not False -- True  -- adding to the head of a list  0:[1..5] -- [0, 1, 2, 3, 4, 5] --- indexing into a list -[0..] !! 5 -- 5 -  -- more list operations  head [1..5] -- 1  tail [1..5] -- [2, 3, 4, 5] @@ -139,12 +148,12 @@ add 1 2 -- 3  -- Guards: an easy way to do branching in functions  fib x -  | x < 2 = x +  | x < 2 = 1    | otherwise = fib (x - 1) + fib (x - 2)  -- Pattern matching is similar. Here we have given three different  -- definitions for fib. Haskell will automatically call the first --- function that matches the pattern of the value.  +-- function that matches the pattern of the value.  fib 1 = 1  fib 2 = 2  fib x = fib (x - 1) + fib (x - 2) @@ -172,7 +181,7 @@ foldl1 (\acc x -> acc + x) [1..5] -- 15  ----------------------------------------------------  -- partial application: if you don't pass in all the arguments to a function, --- it gets "partially applied". That means it returns a function that takes the  +-- it gets "partially applied". That means it returns a function that takes the  -- rest of the arguments.  add a b = a + b @@ -193,19 +202,20 @@ foo = (*5) . (+10)  foo 5 -- 75  -- fixing precedence --- Haskell has another function called `$`. This changes the precedence --- so that everything to the left of it gets computed first and then applied --- to everything on the right. You can use `$` (often in combination with `.`) --- to get rid of a lot of parentheses: +-- Haskell has another operator called `$`. This operator applies a function  +-- to a given parameter. In contrast to standard function application, which  +-- has highest possible priority of 10 and is left-associative, the `$` operator  +-- has priority of 0 and is right-associative. Such a low priority means that +-- the expression on its right is applied as the parameter to the function on its left.  -- before -(even (fib 7)) -- true +(even (fib 7)) -- false  -- after -even . fib $ 7 -- true +even . fib $ 7 -- false  -- equivalently -even $ fib 7 -- true +even $ fib 7 -- false  ----------------------------------------------------  -- 5. Type signatures @@ -272,7 +282,7 @@ foldl (\x y -> 2*x + y) 4 [1,2,3] -- 43  foldr (\x y -> 2*x + y) 4 [1,2,3] -- 16  -- This is now the same as -(2 * 3 + (2 * 2 + (2 * 1 + 4))) +(2 * 1 + (2 * 2 + (2 * 3 + 4)))  ----------------------------------------------------  -- 7. Data Types @@ -310,13 +320,13 @@ Nothing         -- of type `Maybe a` for any `a`  -- called. It must return a value of type `IO ()`. For example:  main :: IO () -main = putStrLn $ "Hello, sky! " ++ (say Blue)  +main = putStrLn $ "Hello, sky! " ++ (say Blue)  -- putStrLn has type String -> IO () --- It is easiest to do IO if you can implement your program as  --- a function from String to String. The function  +-- It is easiest to do IO if you can implement your program as +-- a function from String to String. The function  --    interact :: (String -> String) -> IO () --- inputs some text, runs a function on it, and prints out the  +-- inputs some text, runs a function on it, and prints out the  -- output.  countLines :: String -> String @@ -330,43 +340,43 @@ main' = interact countLines  -- the `do` notation to chain actions together. For example:  sayHello :: IO () -sayHello = do  +sayHello = do     putStrLn "What is your name?"     name <- getLine -- this gets a line and gives it the name "name"     putStrLn $ "Hello, " ++ name -    +  -- Exercise: write your own version of `interact` that only reads  --           one line of input. -    +  -- The code in `sayHello` will never be executed, however. The only --- action that ever gets executed is the value of `main`.  --- To run `sayHello` comment out the above definition of `main`  +-- action that ever gets executed is the value of `main`. +-- To run `sayHello` comment out the above definition of `main`  -- and replace it with:  --   main = sayHello --- Let's understand better how the function `getLine` we just  +-- Let's understand better how the function `getLine` we just  -- used works. Its type is:  --    getLine :: IO String  -- You can think of a value of type `IO a` as representing a --- computer program that will generate a value of type `a`  +-- computer program that will generate a value of type `a`  -- when executed (in addition to anything else it does). We can --- store and reuse this value using `<-`. We can also  +-- store and reuse this value using `<-`. We can also  -- make our own action of type `IO String`:  action :: IO String  action = do     putStrLn "This is a line. Duh" -   input1 <- getLine  +   input1 <- getLine     input2 <- getLine     -- The type of the `do` statement is that of its last line. -   -- `return` is not a keyword, but merely a function  +   -- `return` is not a keyword, but merely a function     return (input1 ++ "\n" ++ input2) -- return :: String -> IO String  -- We can use this just like we used `getLine`:  main'' = do      putStrLn "I will echo two lines!" -    result <- action  +    result <- action      putStrLn result      putStrLn "This was all, folks!" | 
