An overview of what the different parts of lens-4.0 infix operators stand for.
I'll be calling anything that is used to look at data a "lens", e.g. Lens
,
ASetter
, Traversal
. When a more specific term is required, I'll be using the
correct data type (which in particular starts witha capital letter).
(Once this list is properly polished, it might be worth a pull request.)
@
: Provide access to the index of the data field looked at.
Example: ("hello","world","!") ^@. _2
is (1,"world")
, since "world" is
the entry at the second (_2
) entry of the zero-indexed tuple,
hence the retrieved index 1
.
#
: Takes anALens
parameter instead of whatever else the normal operator does. (#
alone is a synonym forreview
, which builds a data structure out of a lens.)
-
^
: General "view data" operator. -
.
: Single value.
Example: (1, "hello") ^. _2
views the second element, "hello"
.
..
: Multiple values as a list.
Example: "Hello, World!" ^.. folded . filtered isLower
keeps only lower
case letters, result: "elloorld"
.
?
: Return the first value of a lookup, orNothing
if there is none.
Example: [1..10] ^? folded
picks the first element of the list, resulting
in Just 1
. [] ^? folded
on the other hand is Nothing
.
?!
: Unsafe version of?
: crashes when there is no value.
Example: [1..10] ^?! folded
is 1
, while [] ^?! folded
is a runtime
error.
!
: Perform a monadic action with the data.
Example: ["Hello","World!"] ^! folded . act putStrLn
prints the list, one
element at a time.
!!
:!
for folds, so that multiple actions can be performed in one go.
Example: [getLine, getLine] ^!! folded . acts
reads two lines, and returns
the results together in a list.
!?
: Like!!
combined with?
: perform all actions, but return only the first result (safely).
Example: [getLine, getLine] ^!? folded . acts
reads two lines, and returns
Just <first line>
.
-
~
: General "set value" operator. -
=
: Same as~
, but set an implicitMonadState
state. -
.
: Specify the new value directly.
Example: (_2 .~ "Mrs. Robinson") ("Hello", "World")
[greets Mrs. Robinson.]
hello-mrs-robinson
?
: UseJust
the specified value, i.e..
with an addedJust
. This mostly seems to be there for symmetry with the getter-?
.
Example: (_2 ?~ "kidding") ("Hello", "World")
greets someone and takes it
back immediately. Safe in Haskell, not so safe otherwise.
%
: Modify, chosen as a pun for other languages use%
as the modulo operator.
Example: (traversed %@~ replicate) "Hello"
replaces each character with an
index-time replication of itself, yielding
["","e","ll","lll","oooo"]
.
-
%%
: ? -
<
: Also return the new value of the modified field. Useful to check on what was actually modified deep inside a structure.
Example: (traversed <%~ Sum . length) (words "let it be")
maps every list
entry to its length, and also the monoidal summary of all
modifications. Stripping the Sum
constructors, the result is
(7, [3,2,2])
.
<<
: Like<
, but returns the old value instead of the new one.
Example: (traversed <<%~ length) (words "let it be")
collects the
unmodified values before applying the function, yielding
("letitbe", [3,2,2])
.
The following symbols are all used as shortcuts to do something specific with a
value. <op>~ x
generally applies (<op> x)
to the fields pointed at, so for
example &&~ x
applies (&& x)
, and <>~ x
mappend
s x
.
- Standard operations
- Standard arithmetic:
+
,-
,*
,//
(Divide;/
was not taken because/=
is inequality),^
,^^
,**
- Boolean:||
,&&
- Monoidal:<>
- Specialized operations (located in *.Lens submodules):
- File paths:
</>
,<.>
- Bitwise arithmetic:.|.
,.&.
-
<%~
modifies (%
) a field inside a structure, and also returns the new value of that field (<
). When applied to aTraversal
, it modifies all targeted values, and also returns a "monoidal summary" (e.g. a list) of all the modified values. -
<<>~
is first and foremost in the library because in a language that has robot monkey operators(:[])
and Kleisli fish>=>
, a rat operator must not be missing.It also
mappend
s (<>
) a value to a field and returns the new value along with the modified structure (the first<
).
&
: Like ordinary$
, but flipped. Useful for chaining lens operations, as they typically read left-to-right.
Example: (["hello", "world"], 42) & _1.mapped <>~ "!" & _2 +~ 10
first
appends "!" to all list elements, and then adds 10 to the second
tuple component, resulting in (["hello!", "world!"], 52)
.
<|
,|>
: Prepend (cons) and append (snoc). Be careful to specify the arguments in the right order or you'll be greeted with a giant error message.
Example: 0 <| [1,2,3]
evaluates to [0,1,2,3]
,
[1,2,3] |> 4
to [1,2,3,4]
.
??
: Most useful when applied to the function Functor, which allows seeing??
as a placeholder for the first of a two-argument function.
Example: f ?? x
is equivalent to \y -> f y x
.
-
<.>
,.>
,<.
: Composition of indexed functions. -
<~
: Execute aMonadState
action, and store the result in the state fields pointed at by the lens. Named to resemble with the<-
symbol, which assigns the result of a monadic action to an ordinary name.
Example: _2 <~ fmap (uncurry (++)) get }
will execute the action on the
right hand side; the result is the concatenation of the two tuple
elements of the state. This is then set as the second field of the
state.