Is the following a definition of structural induction?
foldr f a (xs::ys) = foldr f (foldr f a ys) xs
Can someone give me an example of structural induction in Haskell?
You did not specify it, but I will assume ::
means list concatention and
use ++
, since that is the operator used in Haskell.
To prove this, we will perform induction on xs
. First, we show that the
statement holds for the base case (i.e. xs = []
)
foldr f a (xs ++ ys)
{- By definition of xs -}
= foldr f a ([] ++ ys)
{- By definition of ++ -}
= foldr f a ys
and
foldr f (foldr f a ys) xs
{- By definition of xs -}
= foldr f (foldr f a ys) []
{- By definition of foldr -}
= foldr f a ys
Now, we assume that the induction hypothesis foldr f a (xs ++ ys) = foldr
f (foldr f a ys) xs
holds for xs
and show that it will hold for the list
x:xs
as well.
foldr f a (x:xs ++ ys)
{- By definition of ++ -}
= foldr f a (x:(xs ++ ys))
{- By definition of foldr -}
= x `f` foldr f a (xs ++ ys)
^------------------ call this k1
= x `f` k1
and
foldr f (foldr f a ys) (x:xs)
{- By definition of foldr -}
= x `f` foldr f (foldr f a ys) xs
^----------------------- call this k2
= x `f` k2
Now, by our induction hypothesis, we know that k1
and k2
are equal,
therefore
x `f` k1 = x `f` k2
Thus proving our hypothesis.
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