This is my take
version using foldr
:
myTake n list = foldr step [] list
where step x y | (length y) < n = x : y
| otherwise = y
main = do print $ myTake 2 [1,2,3,4]
The output is not what I expect:
[3,4]
I then tried to debug by inserting the length of y
into itself and the result was:
[3,2,1,0]
I don't understand why the lengths are inserted in decreasing order. Perhaps something obvious I missed?
If you want to implement take
using foldr
you need to simulate traversing the list from left to right. The point is to make the folding function depend on an extra argument which encodes the logic you want and not only depend on the folded tail of the list.
take :: Int -> [a] -> [a]
take n xs = foldr step (const []) xs n
where
step x g 0 = []
step x g n = x:g (n-1)
Here, foldr
returns a function which takes a numeric argument and traverses the list from left to right taking from it the amount required. This will also work on infinite lists due to laziness. As soon as the extra argument reaches zero, foldr
will short-circuit and return an empty list.
foldr
will apply the function step
starting from the *last elements**. That is,
foldr step [] [1,2,3,4] == 1 `step` (2 `step` (3 `step` (4 `step` [])))
== 1 `step` (2 `step` (3 `step` (4:[])))
== 1 `step` (2 `step (3:4:[])) -- length y == 2 here
== 1 `step` (3:4:[])
== 3:4:[]
== [3, 4]
The lengths are "inserted" in decreasing order because :
is a prepending operation. The longer lengths are added to the beginning of the list.
(Image taken from http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Fold_%28higher-order_function%29)
*: For simplicity, we assume every operation is strict, which is true in OP's step
implementation.
The other answers so far are making it much too complicated, because they seem excessively wedded to the notion that foldr
works "from right to left." There is a sense in which it does, but Haskell is a lazy language, so a "right to left" computation that uses a lazy fold step will actually be executed from left to right, as the result is consumed.
Study this code:
take :: Int -> [a] -> [a]
take n xs = foldr step [] (tagFrom 1 xs)
where step (a, i) rest
| i > n = []
| otherwise = a:rest
tagFrom :: Enum i => i -> [a] -> [(a, i)]
tagFrom i xs = zip xs [i..]
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