{-# LANGUAGE CPP #-} {-# LANGUAGE Rank2Types #-} {-# LANGUAGE FlexibleContexts #-} #ifndef MIN_VERSION_profunctors #define MIN_VERSION_profunctors(x,y,z) 1 #endif #if __GLASGOW_HASKELL__ < 708 || !(MIN_VERSION_profunctors(4,4,0)) {-# LANGUAGE Trustworthy #-} #endif ----------------------------------------------------------------------------- -- | -- Module : Control.Lens.Level -- Copyright : (C) 2012-16 Edward Kmett -- License : BSD-style (see the file LICENSE) -- Maintainer : Edward Kmett <ekmett@gmail.com> -- Stability : provisional -- Portability : Rank2Types -- -- This module provides combinators for breadth-first searching within -- arbitrary traversals. ---------------------------------------------------------------------------- module Control.Lens.Level ( Level , levels , ilevels ) where import Control.Applicative import Control.Lens.Internal.Bazaar import Control.Lens.Internal.Context import Control.Lens.Internal.Indexed import Control.Lens.Internal.Level import Control.Lens.Traversal import Data.Profunctor.Unsafe -- $setup -- >>> :set -XNoOverloadedStrings -- >>> import Control.Lens -- >>> import Data.Char levelIns :: Bazaar (->) a b t -> [Level () a] levelIns = go 0 . (getConst #. bazaar (rmapConst (deepening ()))) where go k z = k `seq` runDeepening z k $ \ xs b -> xs : if b then (go $! k + 1) z else [] {-# INLINE levelIns #-} levelOuts :: Bazaar (->) a b t -> [Level j b] -> t levelOuts bz = runFlows $ runBazaar bz $ \ _ -> Flows $ \t -> case t of One _ a : _ -> a _ -> error "levelOuts: wrong shape" {-# INLINE levelOuts #-} -- | This provides a breadth-first 'Traversal' of the individual 'levels' of any other 'Traversal' -- via iterative deepening depth-first search. The levels are returned to you in a compressed format. -- -- This can permit us to extract the 'levels' directly: -- -- >>> ["hello","world"]^..levels (traverse.traverse) -- [Zero,Zero,One () 'h',Two 0 (One () 'e') (One () 'w'),Two 0 (One () 'l') (One () 'o'),Two 0 (One () 'l') (One () 'r'),Two 0 (One () 'o') (One () 'l'),One () 'd'] -- -- But we can also traverse them in turn: -- -- >>> ["hello","world"]^..levels (traverse.traverse).traverse -- "hewlolrold" -- -- We can use this to traverse to a fixed depth in the tree of ('<*>') used in the 'Traversal': -- -- >>> ["hello","world"] & taking 4 (levels (traverse.traverse)).traverse %~ toUpper -- ["HEllo","World"] -- -- Or we can use it to traverse the first @n@ elements in found in that 'Traversal' regardless of the depth -- at which they were found. -- -- >>> ["hello","world"] & taking 4 (levels (traverse.traverse).traverse) %~ toUpper -- ["HELlo","World"] -- -- The resulting 'Traversal' of the 'levels' which is indexed by the depth of each 'Level'. -- -- >>> ["dog","cat"]^@..levels (traverse.traverse) <. traverse -- [(2,'d'),(3,'o'),(3,'c'),(4,'g'),(4,'a'),(5,'t')] -- -- /Note:/ Internally this is implemented by using an illegal 'Applicative', as it extracts information -- in an order that violates the 'Applicative' laws. levels :: ATraversal s t a b -> IndexedTraversal Int s t (Level () a) (Level () b) levels l f s = levelOuts bz <$> traversed f (levelIns bz) where bz = l sell s {-# INLINE levels #-} -- This is only a temporary work around added to deal with a bug in an unreleased version -- of GHC 7.10. We should remove it as soon as we're able. rmapConst :: Profunctor p => p a b -> p a (Const b x) rmapConst p = Const #. p {-# INLINE rmapConst #-} ilevelIns :: Bazaar (Indexed i) a b t -> [Level i a] ilevelIns = go 0 . (getConst #. bazaar (Indexed $ \ i -> rmapConst (deepening i))) where go k z = k `seq` runDeepening z k $ \ xs b -> xs : if b then (go $! k + 1) z else [] {-# INLINE ilevelIns #-} ilevelOuts :: Bazaar (Indexed i) a b t -> [Level j b] -> t ilevelOuts bz = runFlows $ runBazaar bz $ Indexed $ \ _ _ -> Flows $ \t -> case t of One _ a : _ -> a _ -> error "ilevelOuts: wrong shape" {-# INLINE ilevelOuts #-} -- | This provides a breadth-first 'Traversal' of the individual levels of any other 'Traversal' -- via iterative deepening depth-first search. The levels are returned to you in a compressed format. -- -- This is similar to 'levels', but retains the index of the original 'IndexedTraversal', so you can -- access it when traversing the levels later on. -- -- >>> ["dog","cat"]^@..ilevels (traversed<.>traversed).itraversed -- [((0,0),'d'),((0,1),'o'),((1,0),'c'),((0,2),'g'),((1,1),'a'),((1,2),'t')] -- -- The resulting 'Traversal' of the levels which is indexed by the depth of each 'Level'. -- -- >>> ["dog","cat"]^@..ilevels (traversed<.>traversed)<.>itraversed -- [((2,(0,0)),'d'),((3,(0,1)),'o'),((3,(1,0)),'c'),((4,(0,2)),'g'),((4,(1,1)),'a'),((5,(1,2)),'t')] -- -- /Note:/ Internally this is implemented by using an illegal 'Applicative', as it extracts information -- in an order that violates the 'Applicative' laws. ilevels :: AnIndexedTraversal i s t a b -> IndexedTraversal Int s t (Level i a) (Level j b) ilevels l f s = ilevelOuts bz <$> traversed f (ilevelIns bz) where bz = l sell s {-# INLINE ilevels #-}