Welcome to OStack Knowledge Sharing Community for programmer and developer-Open, Learning and Share
Welcome To Ask or Share your Answers For Others

Categories

0 votes
530 views
in Technique[技术] by (71.8m points)

scheme - Counting elements of a list and sublists

I'm trying to create a function to count all the elements in a list, including the elements of its sublists. initially, to get started, i came up with a basic function myList:

(define myLength 
  (lambda (L)
    (cond
      ((null? L) 0)
      (else (+ 1 (myLength (cdr L)))))))

However, it doesn't help me account for function calls like:

(numAtoms '())              "...should be 0"
(numAtoms '(()))            "...should be 0"
(numAtoms '(1 1))           "...should be 2"
(numAtoms '(1 (1 1) 1))     "...should be 4"
(numAtoms '(1 (1 (1 1)) 1)) "...should be 5"

I'm trying to use basic functions like length, null?, and list?.

See Question&Answers more detail:os

与恶龙缠斗过久,自身亦成为恶龙;凝视深渊过久,深渊将回以凝视…
Welcome To Ask or Share your Answers For Others

1 Answer

0 votes
by (71.8m points)

I think the trick here is to imagine how you can transform your input into the code that you'd want to use to compute the sum. Let's write each of your inputs in the fully expanded form, in terms of cons and '() and whatever other atoms appear in your data:

'()               == '()
'(())             == (cons '() '())
'(1 1)            == (cons 1 (cons 1 '()))
'(1 (1 1) 1)      == (cons 1 (cons 1 (cons 1 '())) (cons 1 '()))
'(1 (1 (1 1)) 1)  == ...

Now, look what would happen if you replaced each occurrence of cons with +, and each occurrence of '() with 0, and each occurrence of something that's not '() with 1. You'd have:

'()                                         => 0                           == 0
(cons '() '())                              => (+ 0 0)                     == 0
(cons 1 (cons 1 '()))                       => (+ 1 (+ 1 0))               == 2
(cons 1 (cons 1 (cons 1 '())) (cons 1 '())) => (+ 1 (+ 1 (+ 1 0)) (+ 1 0)) == 4
...                                         => ...                         == ...

Notice that those sums are exactly the values that you want! Based on this, it seems like you might not want to treat your input as a list so much as a tree built from cons cells. In general, you can map over a tree by specifying a function to apply to the recursive results of processing a pair, and a function to process the atoms of the tree:

(define (treeduce pair-fn atom-fn tree)
  (if (pair? tree)
      (pair-fn (treeduce pair-fn atom-fn (car tree))
               (treeduce pair-fn atom-fn (cdr tree)))
      (atom-fn tree)))

You could then implement that mapping of cons to + and everything else to 1 if it's a list and 0 if it's not by:

(define (non-null-atoms tree)
  (treeduce +
            (lambda (atom) 
              (if (not (null? atom))
                  1
                  0))
            tree))

This yields the kinds of results you'd expect:

(non-null-atoms '())              ;=> 0
(non-null-atoms '(()))            ;=> 0
(non-null-atoms '(1 1))           ;=> 2
(non-null-atoms '(1 (1 1) 1))     ;=> 4
(non-null-atoms '(1 (1 (1 1)) 1)) ;=> 5

与恶龙缠斗过久,自身亦成为恶龙;凝视深渊过久,深渊将回以凝视…
Welcome to OStack Knowledge Sharing Community for programmer and developer-Open, Learning and Share
Click Here to Ask a Question

...