Enumerator and iteratee: Difference between revisions
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iteratee to be a pair of the function to feed to fold, and the initial | iteratee to be a pair of the function to feed to fold, and the initial | ||
seed (the accumulator in the above example). That achieves the | seed (the accumulator in the above example). That achieves the | ||
separation of concerns: fold (aka, enumerator) has the intimate knowledge | [[separation of concerns]]: fold (aka, enumerator) has the intimate knowledge | ||
of the collection and how to get to the next element; iteratee knows | of the collection and how to get to the next element; iteratee knows | ||
what to do with the current element. | what to do with the current element. |
Revision as of 22:00, 29 January 2009
An enumerator is something that knows how to process a data structure and an iteratee is something that does one step in processing another piece of the big data structure. E.g. to sum up all elements of Data.Map, we do
Map.fold (+) 0 mp
to sum up all elements of a set we do
Set.fold (+) 0 st
Then fold
is the enumerator and (+)
and 0
are the iteratee.
Ditto for any other foldable data structure. Clearly the function that sums the current element with the accumulator, (+), doesn't know or care from which collection the elements are coming from. The initial seed, 0, is again unaware of the collection.
Iteratee is indeed the function that you pass to fold (combined with the seed for practical reasons). One may conceptually consider iteratee to be a pair of the function to feed to fold, and the initial seed (the accumulator in the above example). That achieves the separation of concerns: fold (aka, enumerator) has the intimate knowledge of the collection and how to get to the next element; iteratee knows what to do with the current element.
See also
- Haskell-Cafe on understanding enumerator/iteratee
- Oleg Kiselyov: "Incremental multi-level input processing with left-fold enumerator - predictable, high-performance, safe, and elegant"