The clojure.string
namespace contains a lot of useful functions to work with string values. The escape
function can be used to replace characters in a string with another character. The function accepts as first argument the string value and the second argument is a map. The map has characters as key that need to be replaced followed by the value it is replaced with. For example the map {\a 1 \b 2}
replaces the character a
with 1
and the character b
with 2
.
In the following example code we use the escape
function in several cases:
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When we use a function as argument for the map
function that returns a collection we would get nested collections. If we want to turn the result into a single collection we can concatenate the elements from the collections by applying the concat
function, but we can do this directly with the function mapcat
. The function mapcat
takes as first argument a function (that returns a collection) and one or more collections as next arguments.
In the following examples we see several uses of mapcat
:
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When we are working with sets in Clojure we can use some useful functions from the clojure.set
namespace. In a previous post we learned how we can get the difference of several sets. To get the union of several input sets we use the union
function of the clojure.set
namespace. The function returns a new set that is the union of unique elements from the input sets. A nil
value is ignored by the union
function.
In the following example code we use union
:
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If we want to get the values from a set that are not part of one or more other sets we must use the difference
function in the clojure.set
namespace. The function returns a set with all values from the first set that are different from values in other sets.
In the following example we use the difference
with several sets:
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In Clojure functions are everywhere. In a previous post we learned that sets can be functions, but Clojure also makes keywords functions. A keyword is a symbol starting with a colon (:
) and is mostly used in map entries as key symbol. The keyword as function accepts a map as single argument and returns the value for the key that equals the keyword in the map or nil
if the keyword cannot be found.
In the following code we use keywords as function in several examples:
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One of the nice things in Clojure is that some data structures are also functions. For me this felt rather strange when learning Clojure (coming from Java), but it can be very powerful. A set in Clojure is also a function. The set as function accept a single argument and it return nil
when the argument is not part of the set, otherwise the argument value is returned. This behaviour also makes a set as function a nice predicate to be used for example in collection functions.
In the following example code we use different sets as function:
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The Clojure function complement
can be used to created a new function that returns the opposite truth value of the old function. The new function accepts the same number of arguments as the old function. Also when we invoke the new function created by the complement
the old function is actually invoked and the result is used as argument for the not
function to return the opposite truth value. So if the original function returns false
or nil
the result for the new function is true
.
In the following example code we create a new function bad-weather
that is the complement of good-weather
:
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In Java we can use the iterate
method of the Stream
class to create an unbounded stream based on function invocations. We pass to the iterate
method an initial value and a function that can be applied to the value. The first element in the unbounded stream is the initial value, the next element is the result of the function invocation with as argument the value from the previous element and this continues for each new element. Suppose we have a function expressed as lambda expression i → i + 2
. When we use this lambda expression with the iterate
method and a initial value of 1
we get a stream of 1
, 1 → 1 + 2
, 3 → 3 + 2
, ….
As we get an unbounded stream we must for example use limit
to get the values we want from the stream. But we can also use an extra argument for the iterate
method that is a Predicate
definition. The iterate
method will provide elements as long as the result of the Predicate
is true
. This way we the result of the iterate
method is a bounded stream.
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In Java we can use the generate
method of the Stream
class to create an infinite stream of values. The values are coming from a Supplier
instance we pass as argument to the generate
method. The Supplier
instance usually will be a lambda expression. To give back a fixed value we simply implement a Supplier
that returns the value. We can also have different values when we use a method that returns a different value on each invocation, for example the randomUUID
method of the UUID
class. When we use such a method we can create the Supplier
as method reference: UUID::randomUUID
.
The generate
method returns an unbounded stream. We must use methods like limit
and takeWhile
to get a bounded stream again. We must use findFirst
or findAny
to terminate the unbounded stream and get a value.
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If we want to transform items in a collection we can use the map
function. If we also want to use the index of the element in the collection in the transformation we must use the map-indexed
function. We must provide a function with 2 arguments, where the first argument is the index of the element in the collection and the second argument is the element in the collection.
In the following examples we use the map-indexed
function:
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In Clojure we can use the repeat
function to get an infinite sequence of a given value. We can pass a length argument to get a fixed size sequence of the value. Clojure also provides the repeatedly
function that takes as argument a function without arguments. A infinite sequence of invocations of the function is returned. Just like with the repeat
function we can pass a length argument so the returned sequence has a fixed size.
We use the repeat
and repeatedly
function in the following example:
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The Clojure function cycle
take a collections as argument and creates a lazy sequence by repeating the items in the collection. So if we pass a collection with the characters \a
, \b
and \c
we get a lazy sequence of (\a \b \c \a \b \c …)
.
Written with Clojure 1.10.1.
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