Filter All Elements Matching a Certain Criteria
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| Revision as of 14:02, 24 September 2006 (edit) Ayrnieu (Talk | contribs) (make use of lists:seq/2 ; fix formatting ; actually use same List as before ...) ← Previous diff |
Current revision (14:39, 24 September 2006) (edit) (undo) Ayrnieu (Talk | contribs) m (Filter All Elements Matching a Cetain Criteria moved to Filter All Elements Matching a Certain Criteria: typo) |
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[edit] Problem
From a list, you want only the elements that match certain criteria.
This notion of extracting a subset of a larger list is common. It's how you find all engineers in a list of employees, all users in the "staff" group, or all the filenames you're interested in.
[edit] Solution
Use the lists module's filter or dropwhile functions. The filter function takes a list and a predicate, and returns a list of all elements where the predicate is true.
% Example of lists:filter 1> List = lists:seq(1,16). [1,2,3,4,5,6,7,8,9,10,11,12,13,14,15,16] 2> lists:filter(fun(X) -> X rem 2 == 0 end, List). [2,4,6,8,10,12,14,16] |
The dropwhile function scans through a list, dropping elements until it reaches the first element satisfying some criteria; at this point, it returns the remaining elements of the list. The takewhile function does the opposite, taking elements until some criteria is met, and dropping the rest.
% Example of lists:dropwhile (uses same List as before) 3> lists:dropwhile(fun(X) -> X < 5 end, List). [5,6,7,8,9,10,11,12,13,14,15,16] % Example of lists:takewhile 4> lists:takewhile(fun(X) -> X < 5 end, List). [1,2,3,4] |
Erlang has excellent support for list processing.

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