Regan Heath 
| I am posting this again because I didn't get any feedback on my idea, which may be TL;DR or because people think it's a dumb idea and they were politely ignoring it :p
My original thought was that things like this should "just work"..
auto range = input.byLine();
while(!range.empty)
{
range.popFront();
foreach (i, line; range.take(4)) //Error: cannot infer argument types
{
..etc..
}
range.popFront();
}
The reason it fails was best expressed by Steven:
> This is only available using opApply style iteration. Using range iteration does not give you this ability.
> It's not a permanent limitation per se, but there is no plan at the moment to add multiple parameters torange iteration.
>
> One thing that IS a limitation though: we cannot overload on return values. So the obvious idea ofoverloading front to return tuples of various types, would not be feasible. opApply can do that becausethe delegate is a parameter.
And Jakob pointed me to this proposed solution:
[1] https://github.com/D-Programming-Language/phobos/pull/1866
Which is a great idea, but, I still feel that this should "just work" as I have written it. I think this is what people will intuitively expect to work, and having it fail and them scrabble around looking for enumerate is sub-optimal. I think we can solve it without negatively impacting future plans like what bearophile wants, which is built-in tuples (allowing foreach over AA's etc).
So, the solution I propose for my original problem above is:
Currently the 'i' value in a foreach on an array is understood to be an index into the array. But, ranges are not always indexable. So, for us to make this work for all ranges we would have to agree to change the meaning of 'i' from being an "index" to being a "counter, which may also be an index". This counter would be an index if the source object was indexable. Another way to look at it is to realise that the counter is always an index into the result set itself, and could be used as such if you were to store the result set in an indexable object.
To implement this, foreach simply needs to keep a counter and increment it after each call to the foreach body - the same way (I assume) it does for arrays and objects with opApply.
Interestingly, if this had been in place earlier, then the byKey() and byValue() members of AA's would not have been necessary. Instead keys/values could simply have changed into indexable ranges, and no code breakage would have occurred (AFAICS).
So, to address bearophile's desire for built-in tuples, and iteration over AA's and how this change might affect those plans. It seems to me we could do foreach over AAs/tuples in one of 2 ways or even a combination of both:
Scheme 1) for AA's/tuples the value given to the foreach body is a voldemort (unnamed) type with a public property member for each component of the AA/tuple. In the case of AA's this would then be "key" and "value", for tuples it might be a, b, .., z, aa, bb, .. and so on.
foreach(x; AA) {} // Use x.key and x.value
foreach(i, x; AA) {} // Use i, x.key and x.value
foreach(int i, x; AA) {} // Use i, x.key and x.value
Extra/better: For non-AA tuples we could allow the members to be named using some sort of syntax, i.e.
foreach(i, (x.bob, x.fred); AA) {} // Use i, x.bob and x.fred
or
foreach(i, x { int bob; string fred }; AA) {} // Use i, x.bob and x.fred
or
foreach(i, new x { int bob; string fred }; AA) {} // Use i, x.bob and x.fred
Lets look at bearophile's examples re-written for scheme #1
foreach (v; AA) {}
foreach (x; AA) { .. use x.value .. } // better? worse?
foreach (k, v; AA) {}
foreach (x; AA) { .. use x.key, x.value .. } // better? worse?
foreach (k; AA.byKeys) {}
same // no voldemort reqd
foreach (i, k; AA.byKeys.enumerate) {}
foreach (i, k; AA.byKeys) {} // better. note, no voldemort reqd
foreach (i, v; AA.byValues.enumerate) {}
foreach (i, v; AA.byValues) {} // better. note, no voldemort reqd
foreach (k, v; AA.byPairs) {}
foreach (x; AA) { .. use x.key, x.value .. } // better
foreach (i, k, v; AA.byPairs.enumerate) {}
foreach (i, x; AA) { .. use i and x.key, x.value .. } // better
This is my preferred approach TBH, you might call it foreach on "packed" tuples.
Scheme 2) the tuple is unpacked into separate variables given in the foreach.
When no types are given, components are assigned to variables such that the rightmost is the last AA/tuple component and subsequent untyped variables get previous components up and until the N+1 th which gets index/count.
foreach (v; AA) {} // v is "value" (last tuple component)
foreach (k, v; AA) {} // k is "key" (2nd to last tuple component), ...
foreach (i, k, v; AA) {} // i is "index/count" because AA only has 2 tuple components.
So, if you have N tuple components and you supply N+1 variables you get the index/count. Supplying any more would be an error.
However, if a type is given and the type can be unambiguously matched to a single tuple component then do so.
double[string] AA;
foreach (string k; AA) {} // k is "key"
.. in which case, any additional unmatched untyped or 'int' variable is assigned the index/count. e.g.
foreach (i, double v; AA) {} // i is index, v is "value"
foreach (i, string k; AA) {} // i is index, k is "key"
If more than one typed variable is given, match each unambiguously.
foreach (string k, double v; AA) {} // i is index, k is "key", v is "value"
.. and likewise any unmatched untyped or 'int' variable is assigned index/count. e.g.
foreach (i, string k, double v; AA) {} // i is index, k is "key", v is "value"
foreach (int i, string k, double v; AA) {} // i is index, k is "key", v is "value"
Any ambiguous situation would result in an error requiring the use of one of .keys/values (in the case of an AA), or to specify types (where possible), or to specify them all in the tuple order, e.g.
Using a worst case of..
int[int] AA;
// Error: cannot infer binding of k; could be 'key' or 'value'
foreach (int k; AA) {}
// Solve using .keys/byKey()/values/byValue()
foreach (k; AA.byKeys) {} // k is "key"
foreach (i, k; AA.byKeys) {} // i is index/count, k is "key"
// Solve using tuple order
foreach (k, v; AA) {} // k is "key", v is "value"
foreach (i, k, v; AA) {} // i is index/count, k is "key", v is "value"
So, to bearophile's examples re-written for scheme #2
foreach (v; AA) {}
same
foreach (k, v; AA) {}
same
foreach (k; AA.byKeys) {}
same
foreach (i, k; AA.byKeys.enumerate) {}
foreach (i, k; AA.byKeys) {} // better
foreach (i, v; AA.byValues.enumerate) {}
foreach (i, v; AA.byValues) {} // better
foreach (k, v; AA.byPairs) {}
foreach (k, v; AA) {} // better
foreach (i, k, v; AA.byPairs.enumerate) {}
foreach (i, k, v; AA) {} // better
This scheme is more complicated than #1 so it's not my preferred solution. But, it does name the components better than #1.
Scheme 3) Combination. If we were to combine these ideas we would need to prefer one scheme by default, if we select scheme #1, for example, then any time a foreach is specified we default to assuming #1 where possible, and #2 otherwise.
In which case there are clear cases where scheme #2 is required/used:
- when more than 2 variables are given, or
- a specific type is given for the final variable.
Note that #1 only has 3 possible forms (for AA or tuples):
double[string] AA;
foreach (v; AA) {} // #1 v is voldemort(key, value)/tuple
foreach (i, v; AA) {} // #1 i is index/count, v is voldemort(key, value)/tuple
foreach (int i, v; AA) {} // #1 i is index/count, v is voldemort(key, value)/tuple
#2 would take effect in these forms..
foreach (i, double v; AA) {} // #2 (type given) i is index/count, v is value
foreach (i, string k; AA) {} // #2 (type given) i is index/count, k is key
foreach (i, k, v; AA) {} // #2 (3 variables) i is index/count, k is key, v is value
Bearophile's examples re-written for scheme #3
With..
(*) any // voldemort scheme #1 works with any AA/tuple types even worst case "all one type"
(A) int[int] AA; // worst case
(B) double[string] AA;
foreach (v; AA) {}
(*) foreach (x; AA) { .. use x.value .. } // better?
(A) foreach (i, k, v; AA) { } // worse?
(B) foreach (double v; AA) { } // worse?
foreach (k, v; AA) {}
(*) foreach (x; AA) { .. use x.key, x.value .. } // better?
(A) foreach (k, double v; AA) { } // force scheme #2, worse?
(B) foreach (double v; AA) { } // force scheme #2, worse?
foreach (k; AA.byKeys) {}
same // note, no voldemort reqd
foreach (i, k; AA.byKeys.enumerate) {}
(*) foreach (i, k; AA.byKeys) {} // better, note; no voldemort reqd
foreach (i, v; AA.byValues.enumerate) {}
(*) foreach (i, v; AA.byValues) {} // netter, note; no voldemort reqd
foreach (k, v; AA.byPairs) {}
(*) foreach (x; AA) { .. use x.key, x.value .. } // better
foreach (i, k, v; AA.byPairs.enumerate) {}
(*) foreach (i, x; AA) { .. use i and x.key, x.value .. } // better
(A) foreach (i, k, v; AA) { } // better
(B) foreach (i, k, v; AA) { } // better
This is a trade off between #1 and #2 but on balance I feel it is worse than #1 so is not my preferred solution.
***********
Thoughts?
Regan
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