array-0.2.0.0: Mutable and immutable arraysSource codeContentsIndex
Data.Array.IArray
Portabilitynon-portable (uses Data.Array.Base)
Stabilityexperimental
Maintainerlibraries@haskell.org
Contents
Array classes
Immutable non-strict (boxed) arrays
Array construction
Accessing arrays
Incremental array updates
Derived arrays
Description
Immutable arrays, with an overloaded interface. For array types which can be used with this interface, see the Array type exported by this module, and the Data.Array.Unboxed and Data.Array.Diff modules.
Synopsis
class IArray a e where
bounds :: Ix i => a i e -> (i, i)
module Data.Ix
Array (Array)
array :: (IArray a e, Ix i) => (i, i) -> [(i, e)] -> a i e
listArray :: (IArray a e, Ix i) => (i, i) -> [e] -> a i e
accumArray :: (IArray a e, Ix i) => (e -> e' -> e) -> e -> (i, i) -> [(i, e')] -> a i e
(!) :: (IArray a e, Ix i) => a i e -> i -> e
indices :: (IArray a e, Ix i) => a i e -> [i]
elems :: (IArray a e, Ix i) => a i e -> [e]
assocs :: (IArray a e, Ix i) => a i e -> [(i, e)]
(//) :: (IArray a e, Ix i) => a i e -> [(i, e)] -> a i e
accum :: (IArray a e, Ix i) => (e -> e' -> e) -> a i e -> [(i, e')] -> a i e
amap :: (IArray a e', IArray a e, Ix i) => (e' -> e) -> a i e' -> a i e
ixmap :: (IArray a e, Ix i, Ix j) => (i, i) -> (i -> j) -> a j e -> a i e
Array classes
class IArray a e whereSource

Class of immutable array types.

An array type has the form (a i e) where a is the array type constructor (kind * -> * -> *), i is the index type (a member of the class Ix), and e is the element type. The IArray class is parameterised over both a and e, so that instances specialised to certain element types can be defined.

Methods
bounds :: Ix i => a i e -> (i, i)Source
Extracts the bounds of an immutable array
show/hide Instances
IArray Array e
IArray UArray Bool
IArray UArray Bool
IArray UArray Char
IArray UArray Char
IArray UArray Double
IArray UArray Double
IArray UArray Float
IArray UArray Float
IArray UArray Int
IArray UArray Int
IArray UArray Int8
IArray UArray Int8
IArray UArray Int16
IArray UArray Int16
IArray UArray Int32
IArray UArray Int32
IArray UArray Int64
IArray UArray Int64
IArray UArray Word
IArray UArray Word
IArray UArray Word8
IArray UArray Word8
IArray UArray Word16
IArray UArray Word16
IArray UArray Word32
IArray UArray Word32
IArray UArray Word64
IArray UArray Word64
IArray UArray (StablePtr a)
IArray UArray (StablePtr a)
IArray UArray (Ptr a)
IArray UArray (Ptr a)
IArray UArray (FunPtr a)
IArray UArray (FunPtr a)
IArray (IOToDiffArray IOArray) e
IArray (IOToDiffArray IOUArray) Bool
IArray (IOToDiffArray IOUArray) Bool
IArray (IOToDiffArray IOUArray) Char
IArray (IOToDiffArray IOUArray) Char
IArray (IOToDiffArray IOUArray) Double
IArray (IOToDiffArray IOUArray) Double
IArray (IOToDiffArray IOUArray) Float
IArray (IOToDiffArray IOUArray) Float
IArray (IOToDiffArray IOUArray) Int
IArray (IOToDiffArray IOUArray) Int
IArray (IOToDiffArray IOUArray) Int8
IArray (IOToDiffArray IOUArray) Int8
IArray (IOToDiffArray IOUArray) Int16
IArray (IOToDiffArray IOUArray) Int16
IArray (IOToDiffArray IOUArray) Int32
IArray (IOToDiffArray IOUArray) Int32
IArray (IOToDiffArray IOUArray) Int64
IArray (IOToDiffArray IOUArray) Int64
IArray (IOToDiffArray IOUArray) Word
IArray (IOToDiffArray IOUArray) Word
IArray (IOToDiffArray IOUArray) Word8
IArray (IOToDiffArray IOUArray) Word8
IArray (IOToDiffArray IOUArray) Word16
IArray (IOToDiffArray IOUArray) Word16
IArray (IOToDiffArray IOUArray) Word32
IArray (IOToDiffArray IOUArray) Word32
IArray (IOToDiffArray IOUArray) Word64
IArray (IOToDiffArray IOUArray) Word64
IArray (IOToDiffArray IOUArray) (StablePtr a)
IArray (IOToDiffArray IOUArray) (StablePtr a)
IArray (IOToDiffArray IOUArray) (Ptr a)
IArray (IOToDiffArray IOUArray) (Ptr a)
IArray (IOToDiffArray IOUArray) (FunPtr a)
IArray (IOToDiffArray IOUArray) (FunPtr a)
module Data.Ix
Immutable non-strict (boxed) arrays
Array (Array)
Array construction
arraySource
:: (IArray a e, Ix i)
=> (i, i)bounds of the array: (lowest,highest)
-> [(i, e)]list of associations
-> a i e

Constructs an immutable array from a pair of bounds and a list of initial associations.

The bounds are specified as a pair of the lowest and highest bounds in the array respectively. For example, a one-origin vector of length 10 has bounds (1,10), and a one-origin 10 by 10 matrix has bounds ((1,1),(10,10)).

An association is a pair of the form (i,x), which defines the value of the array at index i to be x. The array is undefined if any index in the list is out of bounds. If any two associations in the list have the same index, the value at that index is implementation-dependent. (In GHC, the last value specified for that index is used. Other implementations will also do this for unboxed arrays, but Haskell 98 requires that for Array the value at such indices is bottom.)

Because the indices must be checked for these errors, array is strict in the bounds argument and in the indices of the association list. Whether array is strict or non-strict in the elements depends on the array type: Data.Array.Array is a non-strict array type, but all of the Data.Array.Unboxed.UArray arrays are strict. Thus in a non-strict array, recurrences such as the following are possible:

 a = array (1,100) ((1,1) : [(i, i * a!(i-1)) | i \<- [2..100]])

Not every index within the bounds of the array need appear in the association list, but the values associated with indices that do not appear will be undefined.

If, in any dimension, the lower bound is greater than the upper bound, then the array is legal, but empty. Indexing an empty array always gives an array-bounds error, but bounds still yields the bounds with which the array was constructed.

listArray :: (IArray a e, Ix i) => (i, i) -> [e] -> a i eSource
Constructs an immutable array from a list of initial elements. The list gives the elements of the array in ascending order beginning with the lowest index.
accumArraySource
:: (IArray a e, Ix i)
=> e -> e' -> eAn accumulating function
-> eA default element
-> (i, i)The bounds of the array
-> [(i, e')]List of associations
-> a i eReturns: the array

Constructs an immutable array from a list of associations. Unlike array, the same index is allowed to occur multiple times in the list of associations; an accumulating function is used to combine the values of elements with the same index.

For example, given a list of values of some index type, hist produces a histogram of the number of occurrences of each index within a specified range:

 hist :: (Ix a, Num b) => (a,a) -> [a] -> Array a b
 hist bnds is = accumArray (+) 0 bnds [(i, 1) | i\<-is, inRange bnds i]
Accessing arrays
(!) :: (IArray a e, Ix i) => a i e -> i -> eSource
Returns the element of an immutable array at the specified index.
indices :: (IArray a e, Ix i) => a i e -> [i]Source
Returns a list of all the valid indices in an array.
elems :: (IArray a e, Ix i) => a i e -> [e]Source
Returns a list of all the elements of an array, in the same order as their indices.
assocs :: (IArray a e, Ix i) => a i e -> [(i, e)]Source
Returns the contents of an array as a list of associations.
Incremental array updates
(//) :: (IArray a e, Ix i) => a i e -> [(i, e)] -> a i eSource

Takes an array and a list of pairs and returns an array identical to the left argument except that it has been updated by the associations in the right argument. For example, if m is a 1-origin, n by n matrix, then m//[((i,i), 0) | i <- [1..n]] is the same matrix, except with the diagonal zeroed.

As with the array function, if any two associations in the list have the same index, the value at that index is implementation-dependent. (In GHC, the last value specified for that index is used. Other implementations will also do this for unboxed arrays, but Haskell 98 requires that for Array the value at such indices is bottom.)

For most array types, this operation is O(n) where n is the size of the array. However, the Data.Array.Diff.DiffArray type provides this operation with complexity linear in the number of updates.

accum :: (IArray a e, Ix i) => (e -> e' -> e) -> a i e -> [(i, e')] -> a i eSource

accum f takes an array and an association list and accumulates pairs from the list into the array with the accumulating function f. Thus accumArray can be defined using accum:

 accumArray f z b = accum f (array b [(i, z) | i \<- range b])
Derived arrays
amap :: (IArray a e', IArray a e, Ix i) => (e' -> e) -> a i e' -> a i eSource
Returns a new array derived from the original array by applying a function to each of the elements.
ixmap :: (IArray a e, Ix i, Ix j) => (i, i) -> (i -> j) -> a j e -> a i eSource
Returns a new array derived from the original array by applying a function to each of the indices.
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