rio-0.1.20.0: A standard library for Haskell
Safe HaskellSafe-Inferred
LanguageHaskell2010

RIO.Text

Description

Strict Text. Import as:

import qualified RIO.Text as T

This module does not export any partial functions. For those, see RIO.Text.Partial

Synopsis

Types

data Text #

A space efficient, packed, unboxed Unicode text type.

Instances

Instances details
Hashable Text 
Instance details

Defined in Data.Hashable.Class

Methods

hashWithSalt :: Int -> Text -> Int #

hash :: Text -> Int #

Display Text Source #

Since: 0.1.0.0

Instance details

Defined in RIO.Prelude.Display

type Item Text 
Instance details

Defined in Data.Text

type Item Text = Char

Creation and elimination

pack :: String -> Text #

O(n) Convert a String into a Text. Subject to fusion. Performs replacement on invalid scalar values.

unpack :: Text -> String #

O(n) Convert a Text into a String. Subject to fusion.

singleton :: Char -> Text #

O(1) Convert a character into a Text. Subject to fusion. Performs replacement on invalid scalar values.

empty :: Text #

O(1) The empty Text.

Basic interface

cons :: Char -> Text -> Text infixr 5 #

O(n) Adds a character to the front of a Text. This function is more costly than its List counterpart because it requires copying a new array. Subject to fusion. Performs replacement on invalid scalar values.

snoc :: Text -> Char -> Text #

O(n) Adds a character to the end of a Text. This copies the entire array in the process, unless fused. Subject to fusion. Performs replacement on invalid scalar values.

append :: Text -> Text -> Text #

O(n) Appends one Text to the other by copying both of them into a new Text. Subject to fusion.

uncons :: Text -> Maybe (Char, Text) #

O(1) Returns the first character and rest of a Text, or Nothing if empty. Subject to fusion.

null :: Text -> Bool #

O(1) Tests whether a Text is empty or not. Subject to fusion.

length :: Text -> Int #

O(n) Returns the number of characters in a Text. Subject to fusion.

compareLength :: Text -> Int -> Ordering #

O(n) Compare the count of characters in a Text to a number. Subject to fusion.

This function gives the same answer as comparing against the result of length, but can short circuit if the count of characters is greater than the number, and hence be more efficient.

Transformations

map :: (Char -> Char) -> Text -> Text #

O(n) map f t is the Text obtained by applying f to each element of t.

Example:

>>> let message = pack "I am not angry. Not at all."
>>> T.map (\c -> if c == '.' then '!' else c) message
"I am not angry! Not at all!"

Subject to fusion. Performs replacement on invalid scalar values.

intercalate :: Text -> [Text] -> Text #

O(n) The intercalate function takes a Text and a list of Texts and concatenates the list after interspersing the first argument between each element of the list.

Example:

>>> T.intercalate "NI!" ["We", "seek", "the", "Holy", "Grail"]
"WeNI!seekNI!theNI!HolyNI!Grail"

intersperse :: Char -> Text -> Text #

O(n) The intersperse function takes a character and places it between the characters of a Text.

Example:

>>> T.intersperse '.' "SHIELD"
"S.H.I.E.L.D"

Subject to fusion. Performs replacement on invalid scalar values.

transpose :: [Text] -> [Text] #

O(n) The transpose function transposes the rows and columns of its Text argument. Note that this function uses pack, unpack, and the list version of transpose, and is thus not very efficient.

Examples:

>>> transpose ["green","orange"]
["go","rr","ea","en","ng","e"]
>>> transpose ["blue","red"]
["br","le","ud","e"]

reverse :: Text -> Text #

O(n) Reverse the characters of a string.

Example:

>>> T.reverse "desrever"
"reversed"

Subject to fusion.

Case conversion

toCaseFold :: Text -> Text #

O(n) Convert a string to folded case. Subject to fusion.

This function is mainly useful for performing caseless (also known as case insensitive) string comparisons.

A string x is a caseless match for a string y if and only if:

toCaseFold x == toCaseFold y

The result string may be longer than the input string, and may differ from applying toLower to the input string. For instance, the Armenian small ligature "ﬓ" (men now, U+FB13) is case folded to the sequence "մ" (men, U+0574) followed by "ն" (now, U+0576), while the Greek "µ" (micro sign, U+00B5) is case folded to "μ" (small letter mu, U+03BC) instead of itself.

toLower :: Text -> Text #

O(n) Convert a string to lower case, using simple case conversion. Subject to fusion.

The result string may be longer than the input string. For instance, "İ" (Latin capital letter I with dot above, U+0130) maps to the sequence "i" (Latin small letter i, U+0069) followed by " ̇" (combining dot above, U+0307).

toUpper :: Text -> Text #

O(n) Convert a string to upper case, using simple case conversion. Subject to fusion.

The result string may be longer than the input string. For instance, the German "ß" (eszett, U+00DF) maps to the two-letter sequence "SS".

toTitle :: Text -> Text #

O(n) Convert a string to title case, using simple case conversion. Subject to fusion.

The first letter of the input is converted to title case, as is every subsequent letter that immediately follows a non-letter. Every letter that immediately follows another letter is converted to lower case.

The result string may be longer than the input string. For example, the Latin small ligature fl (U+FB02) is converted to the sequence Latin capital letter F (U+0046) followed by Latin small letter l (U+006C).

Note: this function does not take language or culture specific rules into account. For instance, in English, different style guides disagree on whether the book name "The Hill of the Red Fox" is correctly title cased—but this function will capitalize every word.

Since: text-1.0.0.0

Justification

justifyLeft :: Int -> Char -> Text -> Text #

O(n) Left-justify a string to the given length, using the specified fill character on the right. Subject to fusion. Performs replacement on invalid scalar values.

Examples:

>>> justifyLeft 7 'x' "foo"
"fooxxxx"
>>> justifyLeft 3 'x' "foobar"
"foobar"

justifyRight :: Int -> Char -> Text -> Text #

O(n) Right-justify a string to the given length, using the specified fill character on the left. Performs replacement on invalid scalar values.

Examples:

>>> justifyRight 7 'x' "bar"
"xxxxbar"
>>> justifyRight 3 'x' "foobar"
"foobar"

center :: Int -> Char -> Text -> Text #

O(n) Center a string to the given length, using the specified fill character on either side. Performs replacement on invalid scalar values.

Examples:

>>> center 8 'x' "HS"
"xxxHSxxx"

Folds

foldl :: (a -> Char -> a) -> a -> Text -> a #

O(n) foldl, applied to a binary operator, a starting value (typically the left-identity of the operator), and a Text, reduces the Text using the binary operator, from left to right. Subject to fusion.

foldl' :: (a -> Char -> a) -> a -> Text -> a #

O(n) A strict version of foldl. Subject to fusion.

foldr :: (Char -> a -> a) -> a -> Text -> a #

O(n) foldr, applied to a binary operator, a starting value (typically the right-identity of the operator), and a Text, reduces the Text using the binary operator, from right to left. Subject to fusion.

Special folds

concat :: [Text] -> Text #

O(n) Concatenate a list of Texts.

concatMap :: (Char -> Text) -> Text -> Text #

O(n) Map a function over a Text that results in a Text, and concatenate the results.

any :: (Char -> Bool) -> Text -> Bool #

O(n) any p t determines whether any character in the Text t satisfies the predicate p. Subject to fusion.

all :: (Char -> Bool) -> Text -> Bool #

O(n) all p t determines whether all characters in the Text t satisfy the predicate p. Subject to fusion.

Construction

Scans

scanl :: (Char -> Char -> Char) -> Char -> Text -> Text #

O(n) scanl is similar to foldl, but returns a list of successive reduced values from the left. Subject to fusion. Performs replacement on invalid scalar values.

scanl f z [x1, x2, ...] == [z, z `f` x1, (z `f` x1) `f` x2, ...]

Note that

last (scanl f z xs) == foldl f z xs.

scanl1 :: (Char -> Char -> Char) -> Text -> Text #

O(n) scanl1 is a variant of scanl that has no starting value argument. Subject to fusion. Performs replacement on invalid scalar values.

scanl1 f [x1, x2, ...] == [x1, x1 `f` x2, ...]

scanr :: (Char -> Char -> Char) -> Char -> Text -> Text #

O(n) scanr is the right-to-left dual of scanl. Performs replacement on invalid scalar values.

scanr f v == reverse . scanl (flip f) v . reverse

scanr1 :: (Char -> Char -> Char) -> Text -> Text #

O(n) scanr1 is a variant of scanr that has no starting value argument. Subject to fusion. Performs replacement on invalid scalar values.

Accumulating maps

mapAccumL :: (a -> Char -> (a, Char)) -> a -> Text -> (a, Text) #

O(n) Like a combination of map and foldl'. Applies a function to each element of a Text, passing an accumulating parameter from left to right, and returns a final Text. Performs replacement on invalid scalar values.

mapAccumR :: (a -> Char -> (a, Char)) -> a -> Text -> (a, Text) #

The mapAccumR function behaves like a combination of map and a strict foldr; it applies a function to each element of a Text, passing an accumulating parameter from right to left, and returning a final value of this accumulator together with the new Text. Performs replacement on invalid scalar values.

Generation and unfolding

replicate :: Int -> Text -> Text #

O(n*m) replicate n t is a Text consisting of the input t repeated n times.

unfoldr :: (a -> Maybe (Char, a)) -> a -> Text #

O(n), where n is the length of the result. The unfoldr function is analogous to the List unfoldr. unfoldr builds a Text from a seed value. The function takes the element and returns Nothing if it is done producing the Text, otherwise Just (a,b). In this case, a is the next Char in the string, and b is the seed value for further production. Subject to fusion. Performs replacement on invalid scalar values.

unfoldrN :: Int -> (a -> Maybe (Char, a)) -> a -> Text #

O(n) Like unfoldr, unfoldrN builds a Text from a seed value. However, the length of the result should be limited by the first argument to unfoldrN. This function is more efficient than unfoldr when the maximum length of the result is known and correct, otherwise its performance is similar to unfoldr. Subject to fusion. Performs replacement on invalid scalar values.

Substrings

Breaking strings

take :: Int -> Text -> Text #

O(n) take n, applied to a Text, returns the prefix of the Text of length n, or the Text itself if n is greater than the length of the Text. Subject to fusion.

takeEnd :: Int -> Text -> Text #

O(n) takeEnd n t returns the suffix remaining after taking n characters from the end of t.

Examples:

>>> takeEnd 3 "foobar"
"bar"

Since: text-1.1.1.0

drop :: Int -> Text -> Text #

O(n) drop n, applied to a Text, returns the suffix of the Text after the first n characters, or the empty Text if n is greater than the length of the Text. Subject to fusion.

dropEnd :: Int -> Text -> Text #

O(n) dropEnd n t returns the prefix remaining after dropping n characters from the end of t.

Examples:

>>> dropEnd 3 "foobar"
"foo"

Since: text-1.1.1.0

takeWhile :: (Char -> Bool) -> Text -> Text #

O(n) takeWhile, applied to a predicate p and a Text, returns the longest prefix (possibly empty) of elements that satisfy p. Subject to fusion.

takeWhileEnd :: (Char -> Bool) -> Text -> Text #

O(n) takeWhileEnd, applied to a predicate p and a Text, returns the longest suffix (possibly empty) of elements that satisfy p. Subject to fusion. Examples:

>>> takeWhileEnd (=='o') "foo"
"oo"

Since: text-1.2.2.0

dropWhile :: (Char -> Bool) -> Text -> Text #

O(n) dropWhile p t returns the suffix remaining after takeWhile p t. Subject to fusion.

dropWhileEnd :: (Char -> Bool) -> Text -> Text #

O(n) dropWhileEnd p t returns the prefix remaining after dropping characters that satisfy the predicate p from the end of t. Subject to fusion.

Examples:

>>> dropWhileEnd (=='.') "foo..."
"foo"

dropAround :: (Char -> Bool) -> Text -> Text #

O(n) dropAround p t returns the substring remaining after dropping characters that satisfy the predicate p from both the beginning and end of t. Subject to fusion.

strip :: Text -> Text #

O(n) Remove leading and trailing white space from a string. Equivalent to:

dropAround isSpace

stripStart :: Text -> Text #

O(n) Remove leading white space from a string. Equivalent to:

dropWhile isSpace

stripEnd :: Text -> Text #

O(n) Remove trailing white space from a string. Equivalent to:

dropWhileEnd isSpace

splitAt :: Int -> Text -> (Text, Text) #

O(n) splitAt n t returns a pair whose first element is a prefix of t of length n, and whose second is the remainder of the string. It is equivalent to (take n t, drop n t).

break :: (Char -> Bool) -> Text -> (Text, Text) #

O(n) break is like span, but the prefix returned is over elements that fail the predicate p.

span :: (Char -> Bool) -> Text -> (Text, Text) #

O(n) span, applied to a predicate p and text t, returns a pair whose first element is the longest prefix (possibly empty) of t of elements that satisfy p, and whose second is the remainder of the list.

group :: Text -> [Text] #

O(n) Group characters in a string by equality.

groupBy :: (Char -> Char -> Bool) -> Text -> [Text] #

O(n) Group characters in a string according to a predicate.

inits :: Text -> [Text] #

O(n) Return all initial segments of the given Text, shortest first.

tails :: Text -> [Text] #

O(n) Return all final segments of the given Text, longest first.

Breaking into many substrings

split :: (Char -> Bool) -> Text -> [Text] #

O(n) Splits a Text into components delimited by separators, where the predicate returns True for a separator element. The resulting components do not contain the separators. Two adjacent separators result in an empty component in the output. eg.

>>> split (=='a') "aabbaca"
["","","bb","c",""]
>>> split (=='a') ""
[""]

chunksOf :: Int -> Text -> [Text] #

O(n) Splits a Text into components of length k. The last element may be shorter than the other chunks, depending on the length of the input. Examples:

>>> chunksOf 3 "foobarbaz"
["foo","bar","baz"]
>>> chunksOf 4 "haskell.org"
["hask","ell.","org"]

Breaking into lines and words

lines :: Text -> [Text] #

O(n) Breaks a Text up into a list of Texts at newline Chars. The resulting strings do not contain newlines.

linesCR :: Text -> [Text] Source #

linesCR breaks a Text up into a list of Texts at newline Chars. It is very similar to lines, but it also removes any trailing 'r' characters. The resulting Text values do not contain newlines or trailing 'r' characters.

Since: 0.1.0.0

words :: Text -> [Text] #

O(n) Breaks a Text up into a list of words, delimited by Chars representing white space.

unlines :: [Text] -> Text #

O(n) Joins lines, after appending a terminating newline to each.

unwords :: [Text] -> Text #

O(n) Joins words using single space characters.

Predicates

isPrefixOf :: Text -> Text -> Bool #

O(n) The isPrefixOf function takes two Texts and returns True iff the first is a prefix of the second. Subject to fusion.

isSuffixOf :: Text -> Text -> Bool #

O(n) The isSuffixOf function takes two Texts and returns True iff the first is a suffix of the second.

isInfixOf :: Text -> Text -> Bool #

O(n+m) The isInfixOf function takes two Texts and returns True iff the first is contained, wholly and intact, anywhere within the second.

In (unlikely) bad cases, this function's time complexity degrades towards O(n*m).

View patterns

stripPrefix :: Text -> Text -> Maybe Text #

O(n) Return the suffix of the second string if its prefix matches the entire first string.

Examples:

>>> stripPrefix "foo" "foobar"
Just "bar"
>>> stripPrefix ""    "baz"
Just "baz"
>>> stripPrefix "foo" "quux"
Nothing

This is particularly useful with the ViewPatterns extension to GHC, as follows:

{-# LANGUAGE ViewPatterns #-}
import Data.Text as T

fnordLength :: Text -> Int
fnordLength (stripPrefix "fnord" -> Just suf) = T.length suf
fnordLength _                                 = -1

stripSuffix :: Text -> Text -> Maybe Text #

O(n) Return the prefix of the second string if its suffix matches the entire first string.

Examples:

>>> stripSuffix "bar" "foobar"
Just "foo"
>>> stripSuffix ""    "baz"
Just "baz"
>>> stripSuffix "foo" "quux"
Nothing

This is particularly useful with the ViewPatterns extension to GHC, as follows:

{-# LANGUAGE ViewPatterns #-}
import Data.Text as T

quuxLength :: Text -> Int
quuxLength (stripSuffix "quux" -> Just pre) = T.length pre
quuxLength _                                = -1

dropPrefix Source #

Arguments

:: Text

prefix

-> Text 
-> Text 

Drop prefix if present, otherwise return original Text.

Since: 0.0.0.0

dropSuffix Source #

Arguments

:: Text

suffix

-> Text 
-> Text 

Drop prefix if present, otherwise return original Text.

Since: 0.0.0.0

commonPrefixes :: Text -> Text -> Maybe (Text, Text, Text) #

O(n) Find the longest non-empty common prefix of two strings and return it, along with the suffixes of each string at which they no longer match.

If the strings do not have a common prefix or either one is empty, this function returns Nothing.

Examples:

>>> commonPrefixes "foobar" "fooquux"
Just ("foo","bar","quux")
>>> commonPrefixes "veeble" "fetzer"
Nothing
>>> commonPrefixes "" "baz"
Nothing

Searching

filter :: (Char -> Bool) -> Text -> Text #

O(n) filter, applied to a predicate and a Text, returns a Text containing those characters that satisfy the predicate.

find :: (Char -> Bool) -> Text -> Maybe Char #

O(n) The find function takes a predicate and a Text, and returns the first element matching the predicate, or Nothing if there is no such element.

partition :: (Char -> Bool) -> Text -> (Text, Text) #

O(n) The partition function takes a predicate and a Text, and returns the pair of Texts with elements which do and do not satisfy the predicate, respectively; i.e.

partition p t == (filter p t, filter (not . p) t)

Indexing

index :: Text -> Int -> Char #

O(n) Text index (subscript) operator, starting from 0.

findIndex :: (Char -> Bool) -> Text -> Maybe Int #

O(n) The findIndex function takes a predicate and a Text and returns the index of the first element in the Text satisfying the predicate. Subject to fusion.

Zipping

zip :: Text -> Text -> [(Char, Char)] #

O(n) zip takes two Texts and returns a list of corresponding pairs of bytes. If one input Text is short, excess elements of the longer Text are discarded. This is equivalent to a pair of unpack operations.

zipWith :: (Char -> Char -> Char) -> Text -> Text -> Text #

O(n) zipWith generalises zip by zipping with the function given as the first argument, instead of a tupling function. Performs replacement on invalid scalar values.

Low level operations

copy :: Text -> Text #

O(n) Make a distinct copy of the given string, sharing no storage with the original string.

As an example, suppose you read a large string, of which you need only a small portion. If you do not use copy, the entire original array will be kept alive in memory by the smaller string. Making a copy "breaks the link" to the original array, allowing it to be garbage collected if there are no other live references to it.

unpackCString# :: Addr# -> Text #

O(n) Convert a literal string into a Text. Subject to fusion.

This is exposed solely for people writing GHC rewrite rules.

Since: text-1.2.1.1

Encoding

encodeUtf8 :: Text -> ByteString #

Encode text using UTF-8 encoding.

decodeUtf8With :: OnDecodeError -> ByteString -> Text #

Decode a ByteString containing UTF-8 encoded text.

NOTE: The replacement character returned by OnDecodeError MUST be within the BMP plane; surrogate code points will automatically be remapped to the replacement char U+FFFD (since 0.11.3.0), whereas code points beyond the BMP will throw an error (since 1.2.3.1); For earlier versions of text using those unsupported code points would result in undefined behavior.

decodeUtf8' :: ByteString -> Either UnicodeException Text #

Decode a ByteString containing UTF-8 encoded text.

If the input contains any invalid UTF-8 data, the relevant exception will be returned, otherwise the decoded text.

lenientDecode :: OnDecodeError #

Replace an invalid input byte with the Unicode replacement character U+FFFD.