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00:11
Hi guys! I'm having problems understanding Haskell's higher order function "scan". To be precise, the first argument of scan, which is following function f :: b -> a -> b
Assuming I implement scan in C++, how could the function take an int and a sting as arguments and return an int?
@NoReply What scan function?
@Jefffrey scanl
Ok, so scanl :: (a -> b -> a) -> a -> [b] -> [a]...
Yeah that's right. The first function takes two arguments, returning a result of the first argument's type.
> scanl f z [x1, x2, ...] == [z, z f` x1, (z f x1) f x2, ...]`
seems fairly easy to understand
it's the same concept of foldl really
00:23
Ok, so let's assume that...
scanl :: (int -> string -> int)
scanl f(add) "foo" [1, 4, 6, 7]
foldl has only arguments of type a
Maybe I'm not making myself clear.
wat
what's f(add)
an adittion
specifically, what's add? the second argument of scanl should be an Int
Ok, let's simplify my question a bit here :)
Why are there two different argument data types a and b, when foldl only uses one data type a.
it doesn't
how is it not using two different types?
take this for example:
00:31
If it doesn't it should have the same signature as foldl. But it doesn't.
scanl :: (b -> a -> b) -> b -> [a] -> [b]
foldl :: (a -> a -> a) -> a -> [a] -> a
foldr :: (a -> b -> b) -> b -> [a] -> b
foldr (\s c -> if null s then c + 1 else c) 0 ["", "a", "", "", "ahuhy"]
here, a ~ String and b ~ Int
Ahhhhhhhhhhhh.
Now I get it.
@NoReply foldl really has this signature: (b -> a -> b) -> b -> [a] -> b
Last question m8, then I'm not bothering you anymore.
Nope. Got it all.
Thank you very much!
 
7 hours later…
07:59
@Jefffrey ohh :)
08:31
@BartekBanachewicz How are you doing?
09:23
nixos.org/nix any thoughts?
 
1 hour later…
10:29
@Jefffrey puffnfresh mentioned he switched to it from cabal
@Jefffrey quite fine :)

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