Portability | portable |
---|---|
Stability | experimental |
Maintainer | libraries@haskell.org |
Safe Haskell | Safe |
Multi-way trees (aka rose trees) and forests.
- data Tree a = Node {}
- type Forest a = [Tree a]
- drawTree :: Tree String -> String
- drawForest :: Forest String -> String
- flatten :: Tree a -> [a]
- levels :: Tree a -> [[a]]
- unfoldTree :: (b -> (a, [b])) -> b -> Tree a
- unfoldForest :: (b -> (a, [b])) -> [b] -> Forest a
- unfoldTreeM :: Monad m => (b -> m (a, [b])) -> b -> m (Tree a)
- unfoldForestM :: Monad m => (b -> m (a, [b])) -> [b] -> m (Forest a)
- unfoldTreeM_BF :: Monad m => (b -> m (a, [b])) -> b -> m (Tree a)
- unfoldForestM_BF :: Monad m => (b -> m (a, [b])) -> [b] -> m (Forest a)
Documentation
Multi-way trees, also known as rose trees.
Two-dimensional drawing
drawForest :: Forest String -> StringSource
Neat 2-dimensional drawing of a forest.
Extraction
Building trees
unfoldTree :: (b -> (a, [b])) -> b -> Tree aSource
Build a tree from a seed value
unfoldForest :: (b -> (a, [b])) -> [b] -> Forest aSource
Build a forest from a list of seed values
unfoldTreeM :: Monad m => (b -> m (a, [b])) -> b -> m (Tree a)Source
Monadic tree builder, in depth-first order
unfoldForestM :: Monad m => (b -> m (a, [b])) -> [b] -> m (Forest a)Source
Monadic forest builder, in depth-first order
unfoldTreeM_BF :: Monad m => (b -> m (a, [b])) -> b -> m (Tree a)Source
Monadic tree builder, in breadth-first order, using an algorithm adapted from Breadth-First Numbering: Lessons from a Small Exercise in Algorithm Design, by Chris Okasaki, ICFP'00.
unfoldForestM_BF :: Monad m => (b -> m (a, [b])) -> [b] -> m (Forest a)Source
Monadic forest builder, in breadth-first order, using an algorithm adapted from Breadth-First Numbering: Lessons from a Small Exercise in Algorithm Design, by Chris Okasaki, ICFP'00.