| 1 | Iterators
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| 2 | =========
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| 3 | This is the proposal for adding iterators to Cforall and the standard
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| 4 | library. Iterators provide a common interface for sequences of values in
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| 5 | the language. Many inputs and outputs can be described in terms of sequences,
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| 6 | creating a common interface that can be used in many places.
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| 7 | 
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| 8 | Related Traits
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| 9 | --------------
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| 10 | There are two groups of types that interact with this proposal.
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| 11 | 
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| 12 | Iterator
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| 13 | 
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| 14 | An iterator has a very simple interface with a single operation.
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| 15 | The operation is "get the next value in the sequence", but this actually has
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| 16 | several parts, in that it has to check if there are move values, return the
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| 17 | next one if there is one, and update any internal information in the iterator.
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| 18 | For example: `Maybe(Item) next(Iter &);`.
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| 19 | 
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| 20 | Now, iterators can have other operations. Notably, they are often also
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| 21 | iterables that return themselves. They can also have a verity of iterator
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| 22 | transformers built in.
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| 23 | 
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| 24 | Iterable
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| 25 | 
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| 26 | Anything that you can get an iterator from is called an iterable. There
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| 27 | is an operation to get an iterator from an iterable.
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| 28 | 
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| 29 | Range For Loop
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| 30 | --------------
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| 31 | One part of the language that could be reworked to make good use of this is
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| 32 | for loops. In short, remove most of the special rules that can be done inside
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| 33 | the identifier and make it a generic range for loop:
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| 34 | 
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| 35 |     ```
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| 36 |     for ( IDENTIFIER ; EXPRESSION ) STATEMENT
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| 37 |     ```
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| 38 | 
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| 39 | The common way to implement this is that expression produces an iterable.
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| 40 | The for loop gets an iterator from the iterable (which is why iterators are
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| 41 | often iterables, so they can be passed in with the same interface) and stores
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| 42 | it. Then, for each value in the iterator, the loop binds the value to the
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| 43 | identifier and then executes the statement. The loop exits after every value
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| 44 | has been used and the iterator is exhausted.
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| 45 | 
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| 46 | For the chained for loop (`for (i; _: j; _)`) can still have its existing
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| 47 | behaviour, advancing through each range in parallel and stopping as soon
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| 48 | as the first one is exhausted.
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| 49 | 
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| 50 | Ranges
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| 51 | ------
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| 52 | Ranges, which may be a data type or a trait, are containers that contain
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| 53 | a sequence of values. Unlike an array or vector, these values are stored
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| 54 | logically instead of by copy.
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| 55 | 
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| 56 | The purpose of this container is to bridge the new iterator interfaces with
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| 57 | the existing range syntax. The range syntax would become an operator that
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| 58 | returns a range object, which can be used as any other type.
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| 59 | 
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| 60 | It might not cover every single case with the same syntax (the `@` syntax may
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| 61 | not translate to operators very well), but should be able to maintain every
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| 62 | option with some library range.
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| 63 | 
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| 64 | Library Enhancements
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| 65 | --------------------
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| 66 | There are various other tools in the library that should be improved.
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| 67 | The simplest is to make sure most containers are iterables.
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| 68 | 
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| 69 | Also, new utilities for manipulating iterators should be created. The exact
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| 70 | list would have to wait but here are some examples.
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| 71 | 
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| 72 | Transformers take in an iterator and produce another iterator.
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| 73 | Examples include map, which modifies each element in turn, and filter,
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| 74 | which checks each element and removes the ones that fail.
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| 75 | 
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| 76 | Producers create new iterators from other information.
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| 77 | Most practical iterators tend to be iterable containers, which produce all
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| 78 | the elements in the container, this includes ranges. Others include infinite
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| 79 | series of one element.
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| 80 | 
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| 81 | Consumers take an iterator and convert it into something else.
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| 82 | They might be converted into a container or used in a for loop. Dedicated
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| 83 | consumers will be some form of folding function.
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| 84 | 
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| 85 | Related Work
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| 86 | ------------
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| 87 | Python has a robust iterator tool set. It also has a `range` built-in which
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| 88 | does many of the same things as the special for loops (the finite and
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| 89 | half-open ranges).
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| 90 | 
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| 91 | In addition, it has many dedicated iterator constructors and transformers,
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| 92 | and many containers can both produce and be constructed from iterators.
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| 93 | 
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| 94 | +   https://docs.python.org/3/reference/datamodel.html#object.__iter__
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| 95 | +   https://docs.python.org/3/library/functions.html#func-range
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| 96 | 
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| 97 | C++ has many iterator tools at well, except for the fact it's "iterators" are
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| 98 | not what are usually called iterators (as above) but rather an abstraction of
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| 99 | pointers. The notable missing feature is that a single iterator has no
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| 100 | concept of being empty or not, instead it must be compared to the end
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| 101 | iterator.
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| 102 | 
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| 103 | However, C++ ranges have an interface much more similar to iterators.
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| 104 | They do appear to be a wrapper around the "pointer" iterators.
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| 105 | 
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| 106 | +   https://en.cppreference.com/w/cpp/ranges
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| 107 | 
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| 108 | Rust also has a imperative implementation of a functional style of iterators,
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| 109 | including a great number of standard transformers. Otherwise, it is very
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| 110 | similar to Python.
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| 111 | 
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| 112 | +   https://doc.rust-lang.org/std/iter/index.html
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