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 | Iterable
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13 |
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14 | An iterable is a container of some type that has a default iterator that goes
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15 | over its own contents. It may be a logical container, like a mathematical range,
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16 | that does not store elements in memory, but it should have logical elements.
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17 | A trait is defined to standardize how to get that iterator.
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18 |
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19 | forall(C, I)
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20 | trait is_iterable {
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21 | I get_iterator(C&);
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22 | }
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23 |
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24 | This is not particularly useful on its own, but is used as standardized glue
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25 | between some other features below.
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26 |
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27 | Iterator
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28 |
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29 | An iterator is an object that can be advanced through a sequence of values.
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30 | An iterator can be checked to see if it is at the end of the sequence, if not
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31 | the next value can be retrieved from it and the iterator advanced. This can
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32 | be done in as little as a single operation:
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33 |
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34 | forall(Iter, Elem)
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35 | trait is_iterator {
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36 | maybe(Elem) next(Iter&);
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37 |
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38 | // is_iterable(I, I&)
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39 | Iter& get_iterator(Iter&);
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40 | }
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41 |
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42 | This interface is not fixed, the function could change or be split into
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43 | multiple functions (ex: `bool next(Elem&, Iter&)`). It should be natural,
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44 | but also efficient to implement. This version will be used for examples in
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45 | the proposal.
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46 |
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47 | When next is called, if there are elements left in the iterators, the next
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48 | element is returned in a maybe and the iterator is advanced. If the iterator
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49 | is exhausted nothing is changed and an empty maybe is returned.
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50 |
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51 | Iterators are also iterables. They must return themselves, this allows
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52 | iterators to be used directly where iterables are expected.
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53 |
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54 | For-Each Loop
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55 | -------------
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56 | The main part of this proposal which is part of the language definition,
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57 | the rest is part of the standard library. And this is the new for-each loop:
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58 |
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59 | for ( IDENTIFIER ; EXPRESSION ) STATEMENT
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60 |
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61 | While this uses similar syntax to the existing special for loops, but takes
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62 | a standard expression. This expression is evaluated, and then the iterator is
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63 | retrieved from it (this should be the identity function iterators). Each
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64 | iteration of the loop then checks the iterator to see if it is exhausted, if
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65 | not it uses the value to execute the statement. If the iterator is exhausted,
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66 | the loop is completed, and control continues after the loop (or the else
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67 | clause if provided).
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68 |
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69 | The loop should show the same behaviour as the following code:
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70 | (`typeof(?)` should be decided by the resolver.)
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71 |
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72 | {
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73 | typeof(?) __iterable = EXPRESSION;
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74 | typeof(?) __iterator = get_iterator(__iterable);
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75 | typeof(?) __next = next(__iterator);
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76 | while (has_value(&__next)) {
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77 | typeof(?) IDENTIFIER = get(&__next)
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78 | STATEMENT
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79 | __next = next(__iterator);
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80 | }
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81 | }
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82 |
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83 | This new loop can (but may not need to) also support the existing variants,
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84 | where the name is omitted or multiple iterators are advanced in lock-step:
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85 |
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86 | for ( EXPRESSION ) STATEMENT
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87 | for ( IDENTIFIER0 ; EXPRESSION0 : IDENTIFIER1 ; EXPRESSION1 ) STATEMENT
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88 |
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89 | These may not be needed. The unnamed variant is a nice short hand.
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90 | The multiple iterator method could be replaced with an iterator transformer
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91 | that has the same behaviour:
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92 |
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93 | for (i, j, k; zip(iter, range, container)) { ... }
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94 |
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95 | This would require some further extensions, but would also allow single
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96 | iterators to iterate over sets of related values. It also shows how library
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97 | features can be used to extend the for-each loop.
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98 |
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99 | Containers as Iterables
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100 | -----------------------
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101 | The primary iterator application is going over the contents of various
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102 | collections. Most of the collections should support the iterable interface.
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103 | Each of these iterators should go over each element in the container.
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104 |
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105 | They could support multiple iterator interfaces. For example, a map could go
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106 | over key-value-pairs, or just keys or just values.
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107 |
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108 | There isn't a lot to say here, except that as the implementation progresses,
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109 | various rules about iterator invalidation should be hammered out.
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110 |
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111 | Ranges
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112 | ------
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113 | The existing range syntax is incompatible with the for-each loop. But this
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114 | can be recovered by making at least some of the range syntax into operators.
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115 | These operators create and return new range types.
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116 |
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117 | The ranges are types that map a random numeric range. For iteration, a range
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118 | is also considered an iterator over the numbers in the range.
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119 |
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120 | The there could be up to 6 new operators to create ranges. These are:
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121 | `~` `+~` `~=` `+~=` `-~` `-~=`
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122 |
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123 | Parsing issues might rule some of these out. Others may be rendered
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124 | irrelevant by iterator transformers. For example, adding a transformer that
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125 | reverses the iterator could replace having downwards range operators.
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126 |
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127 | The one range that does not involve the operator is the lone number. This is
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128 | a shorthand for a half-open/exclusive range from zero to the given number.
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129 | That is the same behaviour as one (or two ~ and +~) of the existing range
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130 | operators. So it only saves 2-3 characters.
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131 |
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132 | But if we want to save those characters, there may be a special form that
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133 | could be used (for example, in the unnamed case) or you could treat integers
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134 | as iterables that create iterators that count from zero up to the limit.
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135 |
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136 | forall(N) struct Upto { N current; N limit; };
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137 | Upto(int) get_iterator(const int&);
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138 |
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139 | Enumerations as Iterators
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140 | -------------------------
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141 | To convert enumerations to the new form, a new syntax will have to be created
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142 | to treat an enumeration type as an expression returning a range.
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143 |
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144 | Using the unmodified type name seems problematic, it could be done if we
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145 | convert the type expression to some type object that can be passed to the
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146 | get_iterator function. But there are other alternatives.
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147 |
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148 | An operator could be created to convert the type into an iterable expression.
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149 |
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150 | range_over(EnumType)
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151 |
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152 | It is also possible to create a library type that iterates over the range.
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153 | Then we use a compound literal of a nullary type as a flag to get it.
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154 |
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155 | (ERange(EnumType)){}
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156 |
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157 | Both of these are placed in the EXPRESSION part of the for-each loop.
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158 |
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159 | Iterator Transformers
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160 | ---------------------
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161 | New library features could be created to work with iterators. One of the
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162 | biggest groups are transformers, which allow for more complicated compound
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163 | operations on iterators.
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164 |
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165 | For a few examples:
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166 |
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167 | // Create a new iterator that transforms elements from a source iterator.
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168 | forall(I, T, U | is_iterator(I, T))
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169 | /* Iterator over U */ map(U (*func)(T), I iter);
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170 |
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171 | // Create an iterator that keeps only elements that satisfy a predicate.
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172 | forall(I, T | is_iterator(I, T))
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173 | /* Iterator over T */ filter(bool (*pred)(const T&), I iter);
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174 |
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175 | forall(Is..., Ts... | is_iterator(Is, Ts)...)
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176 | /* Iterator over [Ts] */ zip(Is iters);
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177 |
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178 | forall(Index, I, T | is_serial(Index) | is_iterator(I, T))
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179 | /* Iterator over [Index, T]) */ enumerate(Index, I);
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180 |
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181 | The return type is omitted in each case, because usually these functions end
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182 | up being thin wrappers around a constructor for a specialized type that is
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183 | the iterator, in each case, this is the return type.
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184 |
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185 | Also, these should be over iterables (with the conversion from iterable to
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186 | iterator part of the thin wrapper), not just iterators. But the examples are
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187 | easier to write out this way.
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188 |
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189 | Here is one example expanded to cover those details:
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190 |
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191 | forall(Iter, Elem)
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192 | struct Filter {
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193 | bool (*pred)(const Elem&);
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194 | Iter iterator;
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195 | }
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196 |
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197 | forall(Iter, Elem | is_iterator(Iter, Elem))
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198 | maybe(Elem) next(Filter(Iter, Elem) & this) {
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199 | maybe(Elem) ret;
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200 | do {
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201 | ret = next(this.iterator);
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202 | } while (has_value(ret) && this.pred(get(&ret)));
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203 | return ret;
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204 | }
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205 |
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206 | forall(T, Iter, Elem | is_iterable(T, Iter) | is_iterator(Iter, Elem))
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207 | Filter(Iter, Elem) filter(bool (*pred)(const Elem&), T& iterable) {
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208 | return (Filter(Iter, Elem)){ pred, get_iterator(iterable) };
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209 | }
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210 |
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211 | Iterator Consumers
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212 | ------------------
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213 | Eventually we will have to turn the iterators into something else. Iterator
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214 | consumers take an iterator and turn it into something else. The biggest of
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215 | these is the for-each loop, as described above. In addition various library
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216 | functions can be added.
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217 |
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218 | One group of functions are container constructors which take everything from
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219 | the iterable and build a new container out of it. There would be various
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220 | instances of this because you will need one for each container type.
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221 |
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222 | Higher order folding functions (for example, the functional
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223 | `foldr : (a -> b -> b) -> b -> [a]`) are a bit less useful since Cforall does
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224 | not work with anonymous functions quite as well. However, some of the
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225 | specialized versions may still be useful. For example, getting the sum of an
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226 | iterable's elements.
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227 |
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228 | forall(T, I, N | is_iterable(T, I) | is_iterator(I, N) |
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229 | { void ?{}(N&, zero_t); N ?+=?(N&, N); })
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230 | N sum(T & iterable) {
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231 | N acc = 0;
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232 | for ( i ; iterable ) acc += i;
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233 | return acc;
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234 | }
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235 |
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236 | Iterator Producers
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237 | ------------------
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238 | Another group of library features are iterator producers, that take some
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239 | data and create an iterator out of it. Many of already discussed cases are
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240 | actually examples of this (containers, ranges and enumerations).
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241 |
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242 | There are a few more cases that might be useful. Such as "repeat", which
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243 | takes a single element and iterates over it infinitely. This is usually
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244 | combined with other iterators and not used directly.
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245 |
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246 | Other Improvements to Cforall
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247 | ----------------------------
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248 | All code snippets should be considered pseudo-code because they require some
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249 | features that do not currently exist. There are also some that just run into
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250 | current bugs. For instance, my proof of concept for ERange encountered a few
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251 | warnings even after I got it working.
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252 |
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253 | This proposal might also benefit from associated types. Both is_iterable and
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254 | is_iterator may not need to be generic over all their type parameters.
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255 |
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256 | Tuple enhancements might also help with iterators that want to return more
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257 | than one value.
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258 |
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259 | Related Work
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260 | ------------
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261 | Python has a robust iterator tool set. It uses the same iterator / iterable
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262 | divide as described above and has the interfaces (note, Python uses duck
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263 | typing instead of defined interfaces, so these are "imaginary"):
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264 |
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265 | class Iterable:
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266 |
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267 | def __iter__(self):
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268 | # Return an iterator over the iterable's contents.
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269 |
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270 | class Iterator(Iterable):
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271 |
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272 | def __iter__(self):
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273 | # Iterators are iterable over themselves.
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274 | return self
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275 |
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276 | def __next__(self):
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277 | # Return next value if present and advance internal state.
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278 | # Otherwise raise StopIteration exception.
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279 |
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280 | It uses this in for loops, the for loop takes an iterable gets the iterable,
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281 | and iterates until the iterable is exhausted. Iterators are iterables so they
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282 | can be passed in directly as well.
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283 |
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284 | It also has a `range` built-in which handles integer loops, although only
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285 | increasing half-open ranges.
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286 |
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287 | In addition, it has many dedicated iterator constructors and transformers,
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288 | and many containers can both produce and be constructed from iterators.
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289 | For example, the chain function goes though a series of iterators in sequence
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290 | an can be used by:
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291 |
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292 | import itertools
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293 | itertools.chain(iter_a, iter_b)
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294 |
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295 | Python enumerations are implemented in the standard library and are iterables
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296 | over all their possible values. There is no special construct for this, in
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297 | Python types are object, and the type of an enum type object is EnumType
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298 | which supports the iterable interface.
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299 |
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300 | for elem in SomeEnum:
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301 | print(elem)
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302 |
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303 | Python References
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304 | + https://docs.python.org/3/reference/datamodel.html#object.__iter__
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305 | + https://docs.python.org/3/library/functions.html#func-range
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306 | + https://docs.python.org/3/library/enum.html
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307 |
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308 | C++ has many iterator tools at well, except for the fact it's "iterators" are
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309 | not what are usually called iterators (as above) but rather an abstraction of
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310 | pointers. The notable missing feature is that a single iterator has no
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311 | concept of being empty or not, instead it must be compared to the end
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312 | iterator.
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313 |
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314 | However, C++ ranges have an interface much more similar to iterators.
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315 | They do appear to be a wrapper around the "pointer" iterators.
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316 |
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317 | template< class T >
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318 | concept range = requires( T& t ) {
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319 | ranges::begin(t);
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320 | ranges::end(t);
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321 | };
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322 |
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323 | C++ also has "structured bindings" which can be used to unpack an object and
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324 | bind its components to different names. This can be used to iterate over
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325 | multiple values simultaneously. In this example from the Cforall compiler
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326 | using a custom utility function written without special support.
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327 |
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328 | for ( auto const & [index, handler] : enumerate( terminate_handlers ) ) {
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329 | ...
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330 | }
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331 |
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332 | C++ References
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333 | + https://en.cppreference.com/w/cpp/ranges
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334 | + https://en.cppreference.com/w/cpp/language/structured_binding
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335 |
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336 | Rust also has a imperative implementation of a functional style of iterators,
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337 | with iterator tools implemented as "Provided Methods". Provided methods
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338 | including a great number of standard transformers. Otherwise, it is very
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339 | similar to Python.
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340 |
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341 | pub trait Iterator {
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342 | type Item;
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343 |
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344 | fn next(&mut self) -> Option<Self::Item>;
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345 |
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346 | // Many provided methods ...
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347 | }
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348 |
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349 | Not that Rust has many of its iterator transformers stored as methods on the
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350 | iterator. These methods are "provided" so you only have to define next, but
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351 | you can redefine the other methods to provide optimizations.
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352 |
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353 | Rust also has range expressions. Based around `start .. end` and
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354 | `start ..= end`, with the sub-expressions giving the start and end of the
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355 | range being optional, except for end after `..=`. If start is omitted, the
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356 | range has no lower bound, otherwise the range uses start as its inclusive
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357 | lower bound. It is the same case for end and the upper bound, except that the
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358 | `..=` will have an inclusive upper bound instead of an exclusive one.
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359 |
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360 | Rust achieves ordering and step control by iterator transformers. `.rev()`
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361 | allows you to reverse a range and `.step_by(step)` provides a positive step
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362 | value.
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363 |
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364 | Rust Reference
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365 | + https://doc.rust-lang.org/std/iter/trait.Iterator.html
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366 | + https://doc.rust-lang.org/reference/expressions/range-expr.html
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367 | + https://doc.rust-lang.org/std/iter/trait.Iterator.html#method.rev
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