package lwt

  1. Overview
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  • since 5.5.0
type 'a t = unit -> 'a node Lwt.t

The type of delayed lists containing elements of type 'a. Note that the concrete list node 'a node is delayed under a closure, not a lazy block, which means it might be recomputed every time we access it.

and +'a node =
  1. | Nil
  2. | Cons of 'a * 'a t
    (*

    A fully-evaluated list node, either empty or containing an element and a delayed tail.

    *)
val empty : 'a t

The empty sequence, containing no elements.

val return : 'a -> 'a t

The singleton sequence containing only the given element.

val return_lwt : 'a Lwt.t -> 'a t

The singleton sequence containing only the given promised element.

val cons : 'a -> 'a t -> 'a t

cons x xs is the sequence containing the element x followed by the sequence xs

val cons_lwt : 'a Lwt.t -> 'a t -> 'a t

cons x xs is the sequence containing the element promised by x followed by the sequence xs

val append : 'a t -> 'a t -> 'a t

append xs ys is the sequence xs followed by the sequence ys

val map : ('a -> 'b) -> 'a t -> 'b t

map f seq returns a new sequence whose elements are the elements of seq, transformed by f. This transformation is lazy, it only applies when the result is traversed.

val map_s : ('a -> 'b Lwt.t) -> 'a t -> 'b t

map_s f seq is like map f seq but f is a function that returns a promise.

Note that there is no concurrency between the promises from the underlying sequence seq and the promises from applying the function f. In other words, the next promise-element of the underlying sequence (seq) is only created when the current promise-element of the returned sequence (as mapped by f) has resolved. This scheduling is true for all the _s functions of this module.

val filter : ('a -> bool) -> 'a t -> 'a t

Remove from the sequence the elements that do not satisfy the given predicate. This transformation is lazy, it only applies when the result is traversed.

val filter_s : ('a -> bool Lwt.t) -> 'a t -> 'a t

filter_s is like filter but the predicate returns a promise.

See map_s for additional details about scheduling.

val filter_map : ('a -> 'b option) -> 'a t -> 'b t

Apply the function to every element; if f x = None then x is dropped; if f x = Some y then y is returned. This transformation is lazy, it only applies when the result is traversed.

val filter_map_s : ('a -> 'b option Lwt.t) -> 'a t -> 'b t

filter_map_s is like filter but the predicate returns a promise.

See map_s for additional details about scheduling.

val flat_map : ('a -> 'b t) -> 'a t -> 'b t

Map each element to a subsequence, then return each element of this sub-sequence in turn. This transformation is lazy, it only applies when the result is traversed.

val fold_left : ('a -> 'b -> 'a) -> 'a -> 'b t -> 'a Lwt.t

Traverse the sequence from left to right, combining each element with the accumulator using the given function. The traversal happens immediately and will not terminate (i.e., the promise will not resolve) on infinite sequences.

val fold_left_s : ('a -> 'b -> 'a Lwt.t) -> 'a -> 'b t -> 'a Lwt.t

fold_left_s is like fold_left but the function returns a promise.

See map_s for additional details about scheduling.

val iter : ('a -> unit) -> 'a t -> unit Lwt.t

Iterate on the sequence, calling the (imperative) function on every element.

The sequence's next node is evaluated only once the function has finished processing the current element. More formally: the promise for the n+1th node of the sequence is created only once the promise returned by f on the nth element of the sequence has resolved.

The traversal happens immediately and will not terminate (i.e., the promise will not resolve) on infinite sequences.

val iter_s : ('a -> unit Lwt.t) -> 'a t -> unit Lwt.t

iter_s is like iter but the function returns a promise.

See map_s for additional details about scheduling.

val iter_p : ('a -> unit Lwt.t) -> 'a t -> unit Lwt.t

Iterate on the sequence, calling the (imperative) function on every element.

The sequence's next node is evaluated as soon as the previous node is resolved.

The traversal happens immediately and will not terminate (i.e., the promise will not resolve) on infinite sequences.

val iter_n : ?max_concurrency:int -> ('a -> unit Lwt.t) -> 'a t -> unit Lwt.t

iter_n ~max_concurrency f s

Iterates on the sequence s, calling the (imperative) function f on every element.

The sum total of unresolved promises returned by f never exceeds max_concurrency. Node suspensions are evaluated only when there is capacity for f-promises to be evaluated. Consequently, there might be significantly fewer than max_concurrency promises being evaluated concurrently; especially if the node suspensions take longer to evaluate than the f-promises.

The traversal happens immediately and will not terminate (i.e., the promise will not resolve) on infinite sequences.

  • parameter max_concurrency

    defaults to 1.

  • raises Invalid_argument

    if max_concurrency < 1.

val unfold : ('b -> ('a * 'b) option) -> 'b -> 'a t

Build a sequence from a step function and an initial value. unfold f u returns empty if the promise f u resolves to None, or fun () -> Lwt.return (Cons (x, unfold f y)) if the promise f u resolves to Some (x, y).

val unfold_lwt : ('b -> ('a * 'b) option Lwt.t) -> 'b -> 'a t

unfold_lwt is like unfold but the step function returns a promise.

val to_list : 'a t -> 'a list Lwt.t

Convert a sequence to a list, preserving order. The traversal happens immediately and will not terminate (i.e., the promise will not resolve) on infinite sequences.

val of_list : 'a list -> 'a t

Convert a list to a sequence, preserving order.

val of_seq : 'a Stdlib.Seq.t -> 'a t

Convert from 'a Stdlib.Seq.t to 'a Lwt_seq.t. This transformation is lazy, it only applies when the result is traversed.

val of_seq_lwt : 'a Lwt.t Stdlib.Seq.t -> 'a t

Convert from 'a Lwt.t Stdlib.Seq.t to 'a Lwt_seq.t. This transformation is lazy, it only applies when the result is traversed.

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