A TC39 proposal to create iterators by sequencing existing iterators.
Stage: 2.7
Specification: https://tc39.es/proposal-iterator-sequencing/
Often you have 2 or more iterators, the values of which you would like to
consume in sequence, as if they were a single iterator. Iterator libraries (and
standard libraries of other languages) often have a function called concat
or
chain
to do this. In JavaScript today, one can accomplish this with generators:
let lows = Iterator.from([0, 1, 2, 3]);
let highs = Iterator.from([6, 7, 8, 9]);
let lowsAndHighs = function* () {
yield* lows;
yield* highs;
}();
Array.from(lowsAndHighs); // [0, 1, 2, 3, 6, 7, 8, 9]
It is also useful to be able to sequence immediate values among the iterators,
as one would do with yield
using the generator approach.
let digits = function* () {
yield* lows;
yield 4;
yield 5;
yield* highs;
}();
Array.from(digits); // [0, 1, 2, 3, 4, 5, 6, 7, 8, 9]
We should explore how to make this more ergonomic and functional.
let digits = Iterator.concat(lows, [4, 5], highs);
For the (rare) case of infinite iterators of iterators, use flatMap
with the identity function.
function* p() {
for (let n = 1;; ++n) {
yield Array(n).fill(n);
}
}
let repeatedNats = p().flatMap(x => x);
language | data type | exactly 2 | arbitrary |
---|---|---|---|
Clojure | lazy seq | concat |
|
Elm | List | append /++ |
concat |
Haskell | Semigroup | <> |
mconcat |
OCaml | Seq | append |
concat |
Python | iterator | chain |
|
Ruby | Enumerable | chain |
|
Rust | Iterator | chain |
flatten |
Scala | Iterator | concat /++ |
|
Swift | LazySequence | joined |
library | exactly 2 | arbitrary |
---|---|---|
@softwareventures/iterator | prependOnce /appendOnce |
concatOnce |
extra-iterable | concat |
|
immutable.js | Seq::concat |
|
iterablefu | concatenate |
|
itertools-ts | chain |
|
lodash | flatten |
|
ramda | concat |
unnest |
sequency | plus |
|
wu | chain |