Recursion in a monad
From HaskellWiki
(Difference between revisions)
m (more) |
(link to tail recursion) |
||
| Line 25: | Line 25: | ||
</haskell> | </haskell> | ||
| - | Or make it tail recursive: | + | Or make it [[tail recursion|tail recursive]]: |
<haskell> | <haskell> | ||
Current revision
People sometimes wonder how to effectively do recursion when inside a
monadicdo
The problem is to read 'n' lines from stdin, recursively:
The obvious, recursive way:
main = f 3 f 0 = return [] f n = do v <- getLine vs <- f (n-1) return $! v : vs
Runs:
$ runhaskell A.hs 1 2 3 ["1","2","3"]
Or make it tail recursive:
f 0 acc = return (reverse acc) f n acc = do v <- getLine f (n-1) (v : acc)
Or abstract the recursion pattern into a fold:
f n = do s <- foldM fn [] [1..n] return (reverse s) where fn acc _ = do x <- getLine return (x:acc)
And finally, apply some functor and pointfree shortcuts:
f n = reverse `fmap` foldM fn [] [1..n] where fn acc _ = (: acc) `fmap` getLine
