hackage.haskell.org : recursion-schemes : 0.4.1
Many recursive functions share the same structure, e.g. pattern-match on the input and, depending on the data constructor, either recur on a smaller input or terminate the recursion with the base case. Another one: start with a seed value, use it to produce the first element of an infinite list, and recur on a modified seed in order to produce the rest of the list. Such a structure is called a recursion scheme. Using higher-order functions to implement those recursion schemes makes your code clearer, faster, and safer. See README for details.
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purl: pkg:hackage/recursion-schemes@0.4.1
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Indexed:
- base >=4 && <4.4
- comonad >=1.0.3 && <1.1
- comonad-transformers >=1.5.3 && <1.6
- streams >=0.6.3 && <0.7
- transformers >=0.2.0 && <0.3