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date | draft | math | medium_enabled | medium_post_id | tags | title | |||
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2022-11-09 15:15:10-05:00 | false | false | true | b419f7d25313 |
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Fold Not Only Reduces |
One misconception when first learning about fold is that it takes a list of elements of a certain type (List[T]
) and "reduces" it to a single item of type T
.
This misconception is aided by one of the most common fold examples: summing a list.
Scala Example:
List(1, 2, 3, 4, 5).foldLeft(0)((c, n) => c + n)
// Returns 15
Haskell Example:
foldl (+) 0 [1,2,3,4,5]
-- Returns 15
However, let us look more closely at the type signature of foldLeft
on a list of type X
.
Haskell:
(B -> X -> B) -> B -> [X] -> B
Scala:
(id: B)(op: (B, X) => B): B
There are a few things we can note here:
- The return type is not influenced by the list type
X
at all. - The return type must match the type of the id of the fold.
- The operation takes two arguments, with the first type matching the id/start (
B
) and the second type matching the type within the list (X
)
To show an example of how we don't need to "reduce", let's return the elements of a list that's greater than 5.
Scala Example:
List(5, 7, 1, 8, 9, 3).foldLeft(List.empty[Int])((c, n) => if n > 5 then c :+ n else c)
// Returns List(7, 8, 9)
Haskell Example:
l5 c n if n > 5 then c ++ [n] else c
foldl l5 [] [5, 7, 1, 8, 9, 3]
-- Returns [7,8,9]