How does foldr work?

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别跟我提以往
别跟我提以往 2020-12-04 06:37

Can anybody explain how does foldr work?

Take these examples:

Prelude> foldr (-) 54 [10, 11]
53
Prelude> foldr (\\x y -> (x+y)/2) 54 [12, 4,         


        
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  • 2020-12-04 07:18

    It helps to understand the distinction between foldr and foldl. Why is foldr called "fold right"?

    Initially I thought it was because it consumed elements from right to left. Yet both foldr and foldl consume the list from left to right.

    • foldl evaluates from left to right (left-associative)
    • foldr evaluates from right to left (right-associative)

    We can make this distinction clear with an example that uses an operator for which associativity matters. We could use a human example, such as the operator, "eats":

    foodChain = (human : (shark : (fish : (algae : []))))
    
    foldl step [] foodChain
      where step eater food = eater `eats` food  -- note that "eater" is the accumulator and "food" is the element
    
    foldl `eats` [] (human : (shark : (fish : (algae : []))))
      == foldl eats (human `eats` shark)                              (fish : (algae : []))
      == foldl eats ((human `eats` shark) `eats` fish)                (algae : [])
      == foldl eats (((human `eats` shark) `eats` fish) `eats` algae) []
      ==            (((human `eats` shark) `eats` fish) `eats` algae)
    

    The semantics of this foldl is: A human eats some shark, and then the same human who has eaten shark then eats some fish, etc. The eater is the accumulator.

    Contrast this with:

    foldr step [] foodChain
        where step food eater = eater `eats` food.   -- note that "eater" is the element and "food" is the accumulator
    
    foldr `eats` [] (human : (shark : (fish : (algae : []))))
      == foldr eats (human `eats` shark)                              (fish : (algae : []))))
      == foldr eats (human `eats` (shark `eats` (fish))               (algae : [])
      == foldr eats (human `eats` (shark `eats` (fish `eats` algae))) []
      ==            (human `eats` (shark `eats` (fish `eats` algae) 
    

    The semantics of this foldr is: A human eats a shark which has already eaten a fish, which has already eaten some algae. The food is the accumulator.

    Both foldl and foldr "peel off" eaters from left to right, so that's not the reason we refer to foldl as "left fold". Instead, the order of evaluation matters.

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  • 2020-12-04 07:20

    I've always thought http://foldr.com to be a fun illustration. See the Lambda the Ultimate post.

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  • 2020-12-04 07:22

    Think about foldr's very definition:

     -- if the list is empty, the result is the initial value z
     foldr f z []     = z                  
     -- if not, apply f to the first element and the result of folding the rest 
     foldr f z (x:xs) = f x (foldr f z xs)
    

    So for example foldr (-) 54 [10,11] must equal (-) 10 (foldr (-) 54 [11]), i.e. expanding again, equal (-) 10 ((-) 11 54). So the inner operation is 11 - 54, that is, -43; and the outer operation is 10 - (-43), that is, 10 + 43, therefore 53 as you observe. Go through similar steps for your second case, and again you'll see how the result forms!

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  • 2020-12-04 07:25

    Ok, lets look at the arguments:

    • a function (that takes a list element and a value (a possible partial result) of the same kind of the value it returns);
    • a specification of the initial result for the empty list special case
    • a list;

    return value:

    • some final result

    It first applies the function to the last element in the list and the empty list result. It then reapplies the function with this result and the previous element, and so forth until it takes some current result and the first element of the list to return the final result.

    Fold "folds" a list around an initial result using a function that takes an element and some previous folding result. It repeats this for each element. So, foldr does this starting at the end off the list, or the right side of it.

    folr f emptyresult [1,2,3,4] turns into f(1, f(2, f(3, f(4, emptyresult) ) ) ) . Now just follow parenthesis in evaluation and that's it.

    One important thing to notice is that the supplied function f must handle its own return value as its second argument which implies both must have the same type.

    Source: my post where I look at it from an imperative uncurried javascript perspective if you think it might help.

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  • 2020-12-04 07:26

    foldr means fold from the right, so foldr (-) 0 [1, 2, 3] produces (1 - (2 - (3 - 0))). In comparison foldl produces (((0 - 1) - 2) - 3).

    When the operators are not commutative foldl and foldr will get different results.

    In your case, the first example expands to (10 - (11 - 54)) which gives 53.

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  • 2020-12-04 07:28

    An easy way to understand foldr is this: It replaces every list constructor with an application of the function provided. Your first example would translate to:

    10 - (11 - 54)

    from:

    10 : (11 : [])

    A good piece of advice that I got from the Haskell Wikibook might be of some use here:

    As a rule you should use foldr on lists that might be infinite or where the fold is building up a data structure, and foldl' if the list is known to be finite and comes down to a single value. foldl (without the tick) should rarely be used at all.

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