struct
LazySequence
<
Base
where
Base
:
Sequence
>
Inheritance |
LazySequenceProtocol, Sequence, _SequenceWrapper
View Protocol Hierarchy →
|
---|---|
Import |
|
Instance Variables
The Base
(presumably non-lazy) sequence from which self
was created.
Declaration
var
elements
:
Base
{
get
}
Identical to self
.
Declaration
var
lazy
:
LazySequence
<
Base
>
{
get
}
Declared In
LazySequenceProtocol
2 inherited items hidden. (Show all)
Instance Methods
Returns a Boolean value indicating whether the sequence contains an element that satisfies the given predicate.
You can use the predicate to check for an element of a type that
doesn't conform to the Equatable
protocol, such as the
HTTPResponse
enumeration in this example.
enum
HTTPResponse
{
case
ok
case
error
(
Int
)
}
let
lastThreeResponses
: [
HTTPResponse
] = [.
ok
, .
ok
, .
error
(
404
)]
let
hadError
=
lastThreeResponses
.
contains
{
element
in
if
case
.
error
=
element
{
return
true
}
else
{
return
false
}
}
// 'hadError' == true
Alternatively, a predicate can be satisfied by a range of Equatable
elements or a general condition. This example shows how you can check an
array for an expense greater than $100.
let
expenses
= [
21.37
,
55.21
,
9.32
,
10.18
,
388.77
,
11.41
]
let
hasBigPurchase
=
expenses
.
contains
{ $
0
>
100
}
// 'hasBigPurchase' == true
predicate
: A closure that takes an element of the sequence
as its argument and returns a Boolean value that indicates whether
the passed element represents a match.
Returns: true
if the sequence contains an element that satisfies
predicate
; otherwise, false
.
Declaration
func
contains
(
where
predicate
: (
LazySequence
<
Base
>
.
Iterator
.
Element
)
throws
-
>
Bool
)
rethrows
-
>
Bool
Declared In
Sequence
Returns a lazy sequence that skips any initial elements that satisfy
predicate
.
predicate
: A closure that takes an element of the sequence as
its argument and returns true
if the element should be skipped or
false
otherwise. Once predicate
returns false
it will not be
called again.
Declaration
func
drop
(
while
predicate
: @
escaping
(
LazySequence
<
Base
>
.
Elements
.
Iterator
.
Element
) -
>
Bool
) -
>
LazyDropWhileSequence
<
LazySequence
<
Base
>
.
Elements
>
Declared In
LazySequenceProtocol
Returns a subsequence containing all but the first element of the sequence.
The following example drops the first element from an array of integers.
let
numbers
= [
1
,
2
,
3
,
4
,
5
]
(
numbers
.
dropFirst
())
// Prints "[2, 3, 4, 5]"
If the sequence has no elements, the result is an empty subsequence.
let
empty
: [
Int
] = []
(
empty
.
dropFirst
())
// Prints "[]"
Returns: A subsequence starting after the first element of the sequence.
Complexity: O(1)
Declaration
func
dropFirst
() -
>
LazySequence
<
Base
>
.
SubSequence
Declared In
Sequence
Returns a subsequence containing all but the last element of the sequence.
The sequence must be finite.
let
numbers
= [
1
,
2
,
3
,
4
,
5
]
(
numbers
.
dropLast
())
// Prints "[1, 2, 3, 4]"
If the sequence has no elements, the result is an empty subsequence.
let
empty
: [
Int
] = []
(
empty
.
dropLast
())
// Prints "[]"
Returns: A subsequence leaving off the last element of the sequence.
Complexity: O(n), where n is the length of the sequence.
Declaration
func
dropLast
() -
>
LazySequence
<
Base
>
.
SubSequence
Declared In
Sequence
Returns a Boolean value indicating whether this sequence and another sequence contain equivalent elements, using the given predicate as the equivalence test.
At least one of the sequences must be finite.
The predicate must be a equivalence relation over the elements. That
is, for any elements a
, b
, and c
, the following conditions must
hold:
areEquivalent(a, a)
is alwaystrue
. (Reflexivity)areEquivalent(a, b)
impliesareEquivalent(b, a)
. (Symmetry)- If
areEquivalent(a, b)
andareEquivalent(b, c)
are bothtrue
, thenareEquivalent(a, c)
is alsotrue
. (Transitivity)
Parameters:
other: A sequence to compare to this sequence.
areEquivalent: A predicate that returns true
if its two arguments
are equivalent; otherwise, false
.
Returns: true
if this sequence and other
contain equivalent items,
using areEquivalent
as the equivalence test; otherwise, false.
See Also: elementsEqual(_:)
Declaration
func
elementsEqual
<
OtherSequence
where
OtherSequence
:
Sequence
,
OtherSequence
.
Iterator
.
Element
==
LazySequence
<
Base
>
.
Iterator
.
Element
>
(
_
other
:
OtherSequence
,
by
areEquivalent
: (
LazySequence
<
Base
>
.
Iterator
.
Element
,
LazySequence
<
Base
>
.
Iterator
.
Element
)
throws
-
>
Bool
)
rethrows
-
>
Bool
Declared In
Sequence
Returns a sequence of pairs (n, x), where n represents a consecutive integer starting at zero, and x represents an element of the sequence.
This example enumerates the characters of the string "Swift" and prints each character along with its place in the string.
for
(
n
,
c
)
in
"Swift"
.
characters
.
enumerated
() {
(
"\(
n
): '\(
c
)'"
)
}
// Prints "0: 'S'"
// Prints "1: 'w'"
// Prints "2: 'i'"
// Prints "3: 'f'"
// Prints "4: 't'"
When enumerating a collection, the integer part of each pair is a counter
for the enumeration, not necessarily the index of the paired value.
These counters can only be used as indices in instances of zero-based,
integer-indexed collections, such as Array
and ContiguousArray
. For
other collections the counters may be out of range or of the wrong type
to use as an index. To iterate over the elements of a collection with its
indices, use the zip(_:_:)
function.
This example iterates over the indices and elements of a set, building a list of indices of names with five or fewer letters.
Now that the shorterIndices
array holds the indices of the shorter
names in the names
set, you can use those indices to access elements in
the set.
for
i
in
shorterIndices
{
(
names
[
i
])
}
// Prints "Sofia"
// Prints "Mateo"
Returns: A sequence of pairs enumerating the sequence.
Declaration
func
enumerated
() -
>
EnumeratedSequence
<
LazySequence
<
Base
>
>
Declared In
Sequence
Returns the elements of self
that satisfy isIncluded
.
Note: The elements of the result are computed on-demand, as
the result is used. No buffering storage is allocated and each
traversal step invokes predicate
on one or more underlying
elements.
Declaration
func
filter
(
_
isIncluded
: @
escaping
(
LazySequence
<
Base
>
.
Elements
.
Iterator
.
Element
) -
>
Bool
) -
>
LazyFilterSequence
<
LazySequence
<
Base
>
.
Elements
>
Declared In
LazySequenceProtocol
, Sequence
Returns the first element of the sequence that satisfies the given predicate.
The following example uses the first(where:)
method to find the first
negative number in an array of integers:
let
numbers
= [
3
,
7
,
4
, -
2
,
9
, -
6
,
10
,
1
]
if
let
firstNegative
=
numbers
.
first
(
where
: { $
0
<
0
}) {
(
"The first negative number is \(
firstNegative
)."
)
}
// Prints "The first negative number is -2."
predicate
: A closure that takes an element of the sequence as
its argument and returns a Boolean value indicating whether the
element is a match.
Returns: The first element of the sequence that satisfies predicate
,
or nil
if there is no element that satisfies predicate
.
Declaration
func
first
(
where
predicate
: (
LazySequence
<
Base
>
.
Iterator
.
Element
)
throws
-
>
Bool
)
rethrows
-
>
LazySequence
<
Base
>
.
Iterator
.
Element
?
Declared In
Sequence
Returns an array containing the non-nil
results of calling the given
transformation with each element of this sequence.
Use this method to receive an array of nonoptional values when your transformation produces an optional value.
In this example, note the difference in the result of using map
and
flatMap
with a transformation that returns an optional Int
value.
transform
: A closure that accepts an element of this
sequence as its argument and returns an optional value.
Returns: An array of the non-nil
results of calling transform
with each element of the sequence.
Complexity: O(m + n), where m is the length of this sequence and n is the length of the result.
Declaration
func
flatMap
<
ElementOfResult
>
(
_
transform
: (
LazySequence
<
Base
>
.
Iterator
.
Element
)
throws
-
>
ElementOfResult
?)
rethrows
-
>
[
ElementOfResult
]
Declared In
Sequence
Returns the non-nil
results of mapping the given transformation over
this sequence.
Use this method to receive a sequence of nonoptional values when your transformation produces an optional value.
transform
: A closure that accepts an element of this sequence
as its argument and returns an optional value.
Complexity: O(1)
Declaration
func
flatMap
<
ElementOfResult
>
(
_
transform
: @
escaping
(
LazySequence
<
Base
>
.
Elements
.
Iterator
.
Element
) -
>
ElementOfResult
?) -
>
LazyMapSequence
<
LazyFilterSequence
<
LazyMapSequence
<
LazySequence
<
Base
>
.
Elements
,
ElementOfResult
?
>
>
,
ElementOfResult
>
Declared In
LazySequenceProtocol
Returns an array containing the concatenated results of calling the given transformation with each element of this sequence.
Use this method to receive a single-level collection when your transformation produces a sequence or collection for each element.
In this example, note the difference in the result of using map
and
flatMap
with a transformation that returns an array.
In fact, s.flatMap(transform)
is equivalent to
Array(s.map(transform).joined())
.
transform
: A closure that accepts an element of this
sequence as its argument and returns a sequence or collection.
Returns: The resulting flattened array.
Complexity: O(m + n), where m is the length of this sequence
and n is the length of the result.
See Also: joined()
, map(_:)
Declaration
func
flatMap
<
SegmentOfResult
where
SegmentOfResult
:
Sequence
>
(
_
transform
: (
LazySequence
<
Base
>
.
Iterator
.
Element
)
throws
-
>
SegmentOfResult
)
rethrows
-
>
[
SegmentOfResult
.
Iterator
.
Element
]
Declared In
Sequence
Returns the concatenated results of mapping the given transformation over this sequence.
Use this method to receive a single-level sequence when your
transformation produces a sequence or collection for each element.
Calling flatMap(_:)
on a sequence s
is equivalent to calling
s.map(transform).joined()
.
Complexity: O(1)
Declaration
func
flatMap
<
SegmentOfResult
where
SegmentOfResult
:
Sequence
>
(
_
transform
: @
escaping
(
LazySequence
<
Base
>
.
Elements
.
Iterator
.
Element
) -
>
SegmentOfResult
) -
>
LazySequence
<
FlattenSequence
<
LazyMapSequence
<
LazySequence
<
Base
>
.
Elements
,
SegmentOfResult
>
>
>
Declared In
LazySequenceProtocol
Calls the given closure on each element in the sequence in the same order
as a for
-in
loop.
The two loops in the following example produce the same output:
let
numberWords
= [
"one"
,
"two"
,
"three"
]
for
word
in
numberWords
{
(
word
)
}
// Prints "one"
// Prints "two"
// Prints "three"
numberWords
.
forEach
{
word
in
(
word
)
}
// Same as above
Using the forEach
method is distinct from a for
-in
loop in two
important ways:
- You cannot use a
break
orcontinue
statement to exit the current call of thebody
closure or skip subsequent calls. - Using the
return
statement in thebody
closure will exit only from the current call tobody
, not from any outer scope, and won't skip subsequent calls.
body
: A closure that takes an element of the sequence as a
parameter.
Declaration
func
forEach
(
_
body
: (
LazySequence
<
Base
>
.
Iterator
.
Element
)
throws
-
>
Swift
.
Void
)
rethrows
Declared In
Sequence
Returns a Boolean value indicating whether the sequence precedes another sequence in a lexicographical (dictionary) ordering, using the given predicate to compare elements.
The predicate must be a strict weak ordering over the elements. That
is, for any elements a
, b
, and c
, the following conditions must
hold:
areInIncreasingOrder(a, a)
is alwaysfalse
. (Irreflexivity)- If
areInIncreasingOrder(a, b)
andareInIncreasingOrder(b, c)
are bothtrue
, thenareInIncreasingOrder(a, c)
is alsotrue
. (Transitive comparability) - Two elements are incomparable if neither is ordered before the other
according to the predicate. If
a
andb
are incomparable, andb
andc
are incomparable, thena
andc
are also incomparable. (Transitive incomparability)
Parameters:
other: A sequence to compare to this sequence.
areInIncreasingOrder: A predicate that returns true
if its first
argument should be ordered before its second argument; otherwise,
false
.
Returns: true
if this sequence precedes other
in a dictionary
ordering as ordered by areInIncreasingOrder
; otherwise, false
.
Note: This method implements the mathematical notion of lexicographical
ordering, which has no connection to Unicode. If you are sorting
strings to present to the end user, use String
APIs that perform
localized comparison instead.
See Also: lexicographicallyPrecedes(_:)
Declaration
func
lexicographicallyPrecedes
<
OtherSequence
where
OtherSequence
:
Sequence
,
OtherSequence
.
Iterator
.
Element
==
LazySequence
<
Base
>
.
Iterator
.
Element
>
(
_
other
:
OtherSequence
,
by
areInIncreasingOrder
: (
LazySequence
<
Base
>
.
Iterator
.
Element
,
LazySequence
<
Base
>
.
Iterator
.
Element
)
throws
-
>
Bool
)
rethrows
-
>
Bool
Declared In
Sequence
Returns a LazyMapSequence
over this Sequence
. The elements of
the result are computed lazily, each time they are read, by
calling transform
function on a base element.
Declaration
func
map
<
U
>
(
_
transform
: @
escaping
(
LazySequence
<
Base
>
.
Elements
.
Iterator
.
Element
) -
>
U
) -
>
LazyMapSequence
<
LazySequence
<
Base
>
.
Elements
,
U
>
Declared In
LazySequenceProtocol
, Sequence
Returns the maximum element in the sequence, using the given predicate as the comparison between elements.
The predicate must be a strict weak ordering over the elements. That
is, for any elements a
, b
, and c
, the following conditions must
hold:
areInIncreasingOrder(a, a)
is alwaysfalse
. (Irreflexivity)- If
areInIncreasingOrder(a, b)
andareInIncreasingOrder(b, c)
are bothtrue
, thenareInIncreasingOrder(a, c)
is alsotrue
. (Transitive comparability) - Two elements are incomparable if neither is ordered before the other
according to the predicate. If
a
andb
are incomparable, andb
andc
are incomparable, thena
andc
are also incomparable. (Transitive incomparability)
This example shows how to use the max(by:)
method on a
dictionary to find the key-value pair with the highest value.
let
hues
= [
"Heliotrope"
:
296
,
"Coral"
:
16
,
"Aquamarine"
:
156
]
let
greatestHue
=
hues
.
max
{
a
,
b
in
a
.
value
<
b
.
value
}
(
greatestHue
)
// Prints "Optional(("Heliotrope", 296))"
areInIncreasingOrder
: A predicate that returns true
if its
first argument should be ordered before its second argument;
otherwise, false
.
Returns: The sequence's maximum element if the sequence is not empty;
otherwise, nil
.
See Also: max()
Declaration
@
warn_unqualified_access
func
max
(
by
areInIncreasingOrder
: (
LazySequence
<
Base
>
.
Iterator
.
Element
,
LazySequence
<
Base
>
.
Iterator
.
Element
)
throws
-
>
Bool
)
rethrows
-
>
LazySequence
<
Base
>
.
Iterator
.
Element
?
Declared In
Sequence
Returns the minimum element in the sequence, using the given predicate as the comparison between elements.
The predicate must be a strict weak ordering over the elements. That
is, for any elements a
, b
, and c
, the following conditions must
hold:
areInIncreasingOrder(a, a)
is alwaysfalse
. (Irreflexivity)- If
areInIncreasingOrder(a, b)
andareInIncreasingOrder(b, c)
are bothtrue
, thenareInIncreasingOrder(a, c)
is alsotrue
. (Transitive comparability) - Two elements are incomparable if neither is ordered before the other
according to the predicate. If
a
andb
are incomparable, andb
andc
are incomparable, thena
andc
are also incomparable. (Transitive incomparability)
This example shows how to use the min(by:)
method on a
dictionary to find the key-value pair with the lowest value.
let
hues
= [
"Heliotrope"
:
296
,
"Coral"
:
16
,
"Aquamarine"
:
156
]
let
leastHue
=
hues
.
min
{
a
,
b
in
a
.
value
<
b
.
value
}
(
leastHue
)
// Prints "Optional(("Coral", 16))"
areInIncreasingOrder
: A predicate that returns true
if its first argument should be ordered before its second
argument; otherwise, false
.
Returns: The sequence's minimum element, according to
areInIncreasingOrder
. If the sequence has no elements, returns
nil
.
See Also: min()
Declaration
func
min
(
by
areInIncreasingOrder
: (
LazySequence
<
Base
>
.
Iterator
.
Element
,
LazySequence
<
Base
>
.
Iterator
.
Element
)
throws
-
>
Bool
)
rethrows
-
>
LazySequence
<
Base
>
.
Iterator
.
Element
?
Declared In
Sequence
Returns a lazy sequence of the initial consecutive elements that satisfy
predicate
.
predicate
: A closure that takes an element of the sequence as
its argument and returns true
if the element should be included or
false
otherwise. Once predicate
returns false
it will not be
called again.
Declaration
func
prefix
(
while
predicate
: @
escaping
(
LazySequence
<
Base
>
.
Elements
.
Iterator
.
Element
) -
>
Bool
) -
>
LazyPrefixWhileSequence
<
LazySequence
<
Base
>
.
Elements
>
Declared In
LazySequenceProtocol
Returns the result of combining the elements of the sequence using the given closure.
Use the reduce(_:_:)
method to produce a single value from the elements
of an entire sequence. For example, you can use this method on an array
of numbers to find their sum or product.
The nextPartialResult
closure is called sequentially with an
accumulating value initialized to initialResult
and each element of
the sequence. This example shows how to find the sum of an array of
numbers.
let
numbers
= [
1
,
2
,
3
,
4
]
let
numberSum
=
numbers
.
reduce
(
0
, {
x
,
y
in
x
+
y
})
// numberSum == 10
When numbers.reduce(_:_:)
is called, the following steps occur:
- The
nextPartialResult
closure is called withinitialResult
---0
in this case---and the first element ofnumbers
, returning the sum:1
. - The closure is called again repeatedly with the previous call's return value and each element of the sequence.
- When the sequence is exhausted, the last value returned from the closure is returned to the caller.
If the sequence has no elements, nextPartialResult
is never executed
and initialResult
is the result of the call to reduce(_:_:)
.
Parameters:
initialResult: The value to use as the initial accumulating value.
initialResult
is passed to nextPartialResult
the first time the
closure is executed.
nextPartialResult: A closure that combines an accumulating value and
an element of the sequence into a new accumulating value, to be used
in the next call of the nextPartialResult
closure or returned to
the caller.
Returns: The final accumulated value. If the sequence has no elements,
the result is initialResult
.
Declaration
func
reduce
<
Result
>
(
_
initialResult
:
Result
,
_
nextPartialResult
: (
Result
,
LazySequence
<
Base
>
.
Iterator
.
Element
)
throws
-
>
Result
)
rethrows
-
>
Result
Declared In
Sequence
Returns an array containing the elements of this sequence in reverse order.
The sequence must be finite.
Complexity: O(n), where n is the length of the sequence.
Returns: An array containing the elements of this sequence in reverse order.
Declaration
func
reversed
() -
>
[
LazySequence
<
Base
>
.
Iterator
.
Element
]
Declared In
Sequence
Returns the elements of the sequence, sorted using the given predicate as the comparison between elements.
When you want to sort a sequence of elements that don't conform to
the Comparable
protocol, pass a predicate to this method that returns
true
when the first element passed should be ordered before the
second. The elements of the resulting array are ordered according to the
given predicate.
The predicate must be a strict weak ordering over the elements. That
is, for any elements a
, b
, and c
, the following conditions must
hold:
areInIncreasingOrder(a, a)
is alwaysfalse
. (Irreflexivity)- If
areInIncreasingOrder(a, b)
andareInIncreasingOrder(b, c)
are bothtrue
, thenareInIncreasingOrder(a, c)
is alsotrue
. (Transitive comparability) - Two elements are incomparable if neither is ordered before the other
according to the predicate. If
a
andb
are incomparable, andb
andc
are incomparable, thena
andc
are also incomparable. (Transitive incomparability)
The sorting algorithm is not stable. A nonstable sort may change the
relative order of elements for which areInIncreasingOrder
does not
establish an order.
In the following example, the predicate provides an ordering for an array
of a custom HTTPResponse
type. The predicate orders errors before
successes and sorts the error responses by their error code.
enum
HTTPResponse
{
case
ok
case
error
(
Int
)
}
let
responses
: [
HTTPResponse
] = [.
error
(
500
), .
ok
, .
ok
, .
error
(
404
), .
error
(
403
)]
let
sortedResponses
=
responses
.
sorted
{
switch
($
0
, $
1
) {
// Order errors by code
case
let
(.
error
(
aCode
), .
error
(
bCode
)):
return
aCode
<
bCode
// All successes are equivalent, so none is before any other
case
(.
ok
, .
ok
):
return
false
// Order errors before successes
case
(.
error
, .
ok
):
return
true
case
(.
ok
, .
error
):
return
false
}
}
(
sortedResponses
)
// Prints "[.error(403), .error(404), .error(500), .ok, .ok]"
You also use this method to sort elements that conform to the
Comparable
protocol in descending order. To sort your sequence
in descending order, pass the greater-than operator (>
) as the
areInIncreasingOrder
parameter.
let
students
:
Set
= [
"Kofi"
,
"Abena"
,
"Peter"
,
"Kweku"
,
"Akosua"
]
let
descendingStudents
=
students
.
sorted
(
by
:
>
)
(
descendingStudents
)
// Prints "["Peter", "Kweku", "Kofi", "Akosua", "Abena"]"
Calling the related sorted()
method is equivalent to calling this
method and passing the less-than operator (<
) as the predicate.
(
students
.
sorted
())
// Prints "["Abena", "Akosua", "Kofi", "Kweku", "Peter"]"
(
students
.
sorted
(
by
:
<
))
// Prints "["Abena", "Akosua", "Kofi", "Kweku", "Peter"]"
areInIncreasingOrder
: A predicate that returns true
if its first
argument should be ordered before its second argument; otherwise,
false
.
Returns: A sorted array of the sequence's elements.
See Also: sorted()
Declaration
func
sorted
(
by
areInIncreasingOrder
: (
LazySequence
<
Base
>
.
Iterator
.
Element
,
LazySequence
<
Base
>
.
Iterator
.
Element
) -
>
Bool
) -
>
[
LazySequence
<
Base
>
.
Iterator
.
Element
]
Declared In
Sequence
Returns the longest possible subsequences of the sequence, in order, that don't contain elements satisfying the given predicate. Elements that are used to split the sequence are not returned as part of any subsequence.
The following examples show the effects of the maxSplits
and
omittingEmptySubsequences
parameters when splitting a string using a
closure that matches spaces. The first use of split
returns each word
that was originally separated by one or more spaces.
let
line
=
"BLANCHE: I don't want realism. I want magic!"
(
line
.
characters
.
split
(
whereSeparator
: { $
0
==
" "
})
.
map
(
String
.
init
))
// Prints "["BLANCHE:", "I", "don\'t", "want", "realism.", "I", "want", "magic!"]"
The second example passes 1
for the maxSplits
parameter, so the
original string is split just once, into two new strings.
(
line
.
characters
.
split
(
maxSplits
:
1
,
whereSeparator
: { $
0
==
" "
})
.
map
(
String
.
init
))
// Prints "["BLANCHE:", " I don\'t want realism. I want magic!"]"
The final example passes true
for the allowEmptySlices
parameter, so
the returned array contains empty strings where spaces were repeated.
(
line
.
characters
.
split
(
omittingEmptySubsequences
:
false
,
whereSeparator
: { $
0
==
" "
}
).
map
(
String
.
init
))
// Prints "["BLANCHE:", "", "", "I", "don\'t", "want", "realism.", "I", "want", "magic!"]"
Parameters:
maxSplits: The maximum number of times to split the sequence, or one
less than the number of subsequences to return. If maxSplits + 1
subsequences are returned, the last one is a suffix of the original
sequence containing the remaining elements. maxSplits
must be
greater than or equal to zero. The default value is Int.max
.
omittingEmptySubsequences: If false
, an empty subsequence is
returned in the result for each pair of consecutive elements
satisfying the isSeparator
predicate and for each element at the
start or end of the sequence satisfying the isSeparator
predicate.
If true
, only nonempty subsequences are returned. The default
value is true
.
isSeparator: A closure that returns true
if its argument should be
used to split the sequence; otherwise, false
.
Returns: An array of subsequences, split from this sequence's elements.
Declaration
func
split
(
maxSplits
:
Int
=
default
,
omittingEmptySubsequences
:
Bool
=
default
,
whereSeparator
isSeparator
: (
LazySequence
<
Base
>
.
Iterator
.
Element
)
throws
-
>
Bool
)
rethrows
-
>
[
AnySequence
<
LazySequence
<
Base
>
.
Iterator
.
Element
>
]
Declared In
Sequence
Returns a Boolean value indicating whether the initial elements of the sequence are equivalent to the elements in another sequence, using the given predicate as the equivalence test.
The predicate must be a equivalence relation over the elements. That
is, for any elements a
, b
, and c
, the following conditions must
hold:
areEquivalent(a, a)
is alwaystrue
. (Reflexivity)areEquivalent(a, b)
impliesareEquivalent(b, a)
. (Symmetry)- If
areEquivalent(a, b)
andareEquivalent(b, c)
are bothtrue
, thenareEquivalent(a, c)
is alsotrue
. (Transitivity)
Parameters:
possiblePrefix: A sequence to compare to this sequence.
areEquivalent: A predicate that returns true
if its two arguments
are equivalent; otherwise, false
.
Returns: true
if the initial elements of the sequence are equivalent
to the elements of possiblePrefix
; otherwise, false
. If
possiblePrefix
has no elements, the return value is true
.
See Also: starts(with:)
Declaration
func
starts
<
PossiblePrefix
where
PossiblePrefix
:
Sequence
,
PossiblePrefix
.
Iterator
.
Element
==
LazySequence
<
Base
>
.
Iterator
.
Element
>
(
with
possiblePrefix
:
PossiblePrefix
,
by
areEquivalent
: (
LazySequence
<
Base
>
.
Iterator
.
Element
,
LazySequence
<
Base
>
.
Iterator
.
Element
)
throws
-
>
Bool
)
rethrows
-
>
Bool
Declared In
Sequence
Returns a subsequence, up to the given maximum length, containing the final elements of the sequence.
The sequence must be finite. If the maximum length exceeds the number of elements in the sequence, the result contains all the elements in the sequence.
let
numbers
= [
1
,
2
,
3
,
4
,
5
]
(
numbers
.
suffix
(
2
))
// Prints "[4, 5]"
(
numbers
.
suffix
(
10
))
// Prints "[1, 2, 3, 4, 5]"
maxLength
: The maximum number of elements to return. The
value of maxLength
must be greater than or equal to zero.
Complexity: O(n), where n is the length of the sequence.
Declaration
func
suffix
(
_
maxLength
:
Int
) -
>
AnySequence
<
LazySequence
<
Base
>
.
Iterator
.
Element
>
Declared In
Sequence
24 inherited items hidden. (Show all)
Conditionally Inherited Items
The initializers, methods, and properties listed below may be available on this type under certain conditions (such as methods that are available on Array
when its elements are Equatable
) or may not ever be available if that determination is beyond SwiftDoc.org's capabilities. Please open an issue on GitHub if you see something out of place!
Where Base.Iterator == Iterator
Returns a value less than or equal to the number of elements in the sequence, nondestructively.
Complexity: O(n), where n is the length of the sequence if the sequence is a collection or wraps a collection; otherwise, O(1).
Declaration
var
underestimatedCount
:
Int
{
get
}
Declared In
_SequenceWrapper
Returns an array containing, in order, the elements of the sequence that satisfy the given predicate.
In this example, filter
is used to include only names shorter than five
characters.
let
cast
= [
"Vivien"
,
"Marlon"
,
"Kim"
,
"Karl"
]
let
shortNames
=
cast
.
filter
{ $
0
.
characters
.
count
<
5
}
(
shortNames
)
// Prints "["Kim", "Karl"]"
includeElement
: A closure that takes an element of the
sequence as its argument and returns a Boolean value indicating
whether the element should be included in the returned array.
Returns: An array of the elements that includeElement
allowed.
Declaration
func
filter
(
_
isIncluded
: (
LazySequence
<
Base
>
.
Base
.
Iterator
.
Element
)
throws
-
>
Bool
)
rethrows
-
>
[
LazySequence
<
Base
>
.
Base
.
Iterator
.
Element
]
Declared In
Sequence
Returns an iterator over the elements of this sequence.
Declaration
func
makeIterator
() -
>
LazySequence
<
Base
>
.
Base
.
Iterator
Declared In
Sequence
Returns an array containing the results of mapping the given closure over the sequence's elements.
In this example, map
is used first to convert the names in the array to
lowercase strings and then to count their characters.
let
cast
= [
"Vivien"
,
"Marlon"
,
"Kim"
,
"Karl"
]
let
lowercaseNames
=
cast
.
map
{ $
0
.
lowercaseString
}
// 'lowercaseNames' == ["vivien", "marlon", "kim", "karl"]
let
letterCounts
=
cast
.
map
{ $
0
.
characters
.
count
}
// 'letterCounts' == [6, 6, 3, 4]
transform
: A mapping closure. transform
accepts an
element of this sequence as its parameter and returns a transformed
value of the same or of a different type.
Returns: An array containing the transformed elements of this
sequence.
Declaration
func
map
<
T
>
(
_
transform
: (
LazySequence
<
Base
>
.
Base
.
Iterator
.
Element
)
throws
-
>
T
)
rethrows
-
>
[
T
]
Declared In
Sequence
4 inherited items hidden. (Show all)
Where Elements == Self
Identical to self
.
Declaration
var
elements
:
LazySequence
<
Base
>
{
get
}
Declared In
LazySequenceProtocol
1 inherited item hidden. (Show all)
Where Iterator == Self
Returns an iterator over the elements of this sequence.
Declaration
func
makeIterator
() -
>
LazySequence
<
Base
>
Declared In
Sequence
1 inherited item hidden. (Show all)
Where Iterator.Element : Comparable
Returns a Boolean value indicating whether the sequence precedes another
sequence in a lexicographical (dictionary) ordering, using the
less-than operator (<
) to compare elements.
This example uses the lexicographicallyPrecedes
method to test which
array of integers comes first in a lexicographical ordering.
let
a
= [
1
,
2
,
2
,
2
]
let
b
= [
1
,
2
,
3
,
4
]
(
a
.
lexicographicallyPrecedes
(
b
))
// Prints "true"
(
b
.
lexicographicallyPrecedes
(
b
))
// Prints "false"
other
: A sequence to compare to this sequence.
Returns: true
if this sequence precedes other
in a dictionary
ordering; otherwise, false
.
Note: This method implements the mathematical notion of lexicographical
ordering, which has no connection to Unicode. If you are sorting
strings to present to the end user, use String
APIs that
perform localized comparison.
See Also: lexicographicallyPrecedes(_:by:)
Declaration
func
lexicographicallyPrecedes
<
OtherSequence
where
OtherSequence
:
Sequence
,
OtherSequence
.
Iterator
.
Element
==
LazySequence
<
Base
>
.
Iterator
.
Element
>
(
_
other
:
OtherSequence
) -
>
Bool
Declared In
Sequence
Returns the maximum element in the sequence.
This example finds the smallest value in an array of height measurements.
let
heights
= [
67.5
,
65.7
,
64.3
,
61.1
,
58.5
,
60.3
,
64.9
]
let
greatestHeight
=
heights
.
max
()
(
greatestHeight
)
// Prints "Optional(67.5)"
Returns: The sequence's maximum element. If the sequence has no
elements, returns nil
.
See Also: max(by:)
Declaration
@
warn_unqualified_access
func
max
() -
>
LazySequence
<
Base
>
.
Iterator
.
Element
?
Declared In
Sequence
Returns the minimum element in the sequence.
This example finds the smallest value in an array of height measurements.
let
heights
= [
67.5
,
65.7
,
64.3
,
61.1
,
58.5
,
60.3
,
64.9
]
let
lowestHeight
=
heights
.
min
()
(
lowestHeight
)
// Prints "Optional(58.5)"
Returns: The sequence's minimum element. If the sequence has no
elements, returns nil
.
See Also: min(by:)
Declaration
@
warn_unqualified_access
func
min
() -
>
LazySequence
<
Base
>
.
Iterator
.
Element
?
Declared In
Sequence
Returns the elements of the sequence, sorted.
You can sort any sequence of elements that conform to the
Comparable
protocol by calling this method. Elements are sorted in
ascending order.
The sorting algorithm is not stable. A nonstable sort may change the relative order of elements that compare equal.
Here's an example of sorting a list of students' names. Strings in Swift
conform to the Comparable
protocol, so the names are sorted in
ascending order according to the less-than operator (<
).
let
students
:
Set
= [
"Kofi"
,
"Abena"
,
"Peter"
,
"Kweku"
,
"Akosua"
]
let
sortedStudents
=
students
.
sorted
()
(
sortedStudents
)
// Prints "["Abena", "Akosua", "Kofi", "Kweku", "Peter"]"
To sort the elements of your sequence in descending order, pass the
greater-than operator (>
) to the sorted(by:)
method.
let
descendingStudents
=
students
.
sorted
(
by
:
>
)
(
descendingStudents
)
// Prints "["Peter", "Kweku", "Kofi", "Akosua", "Abena"]"
Returns: A sorted array of the sequence's elements.
See Also: sorted(by:)
Declaration
func
sorted
() -
>
[
LazySequence
<
Base
>
.
Iterator
.
Element
]
Declared In
Sequence
4 inherited items hidden. (Show all)
Where Iterator.Element : Equatable
Returns a Boolean value indicating whether the sequence contains the given element.
This example checks to see whether a favorite actor is in an array storing a movie's cast.
let
cast
= [
"Vivien"
,
"Marlon"
,
"Kim"
,
"Karl"
]
(
cast
.
contains
(
"Marlon"
))
// Prints "true"
(
cast
.
contains
(
"James"
))
// Prints "false"
element
: The element to find in the sequence.
Returns: true
if the element was found in the sequence; otherwise,
false
.
Declaration
func
contains
(
_
element
:
LazySequence
<
Base
>
.
Iterator
.
Element
) -
>
Bool
Declared In
Sequence
Returns a Boolean value indicating whether this sequence and another sequence contain the same elements in the same order.
At least one of the sequences must be finite.
This example tests whether one countable range shares the same elements as another countable range and an array.
let
a
=
1
...
3
let
b
=
1
...
10
(
a
.
elementsEqual
(
b
))
// Prints "false"
(
a
.
elementsEqual
([
1
,
2
,
3
]))
// Prints "true"
other
: A sequence to compare to this sequence.
Returns: true
if this sequence and other
contain the same elements
in the same order.
See Also: elementsEqual(_:by:)
Declaration
func
elementsEqual
<
OtherSequence
where
OtherSequence
:
Sequence
,
OtherSequence
.
Iterator
.
Element
==
LazySequence
<
Base
>
.
Iterator
.
Element
>
(
_
other
:
OtherSequence
) -
>
Bool
Declared In
Sequence
Returns the longest possible subsequences of the sequence, in order, around elements equal to the given element.
The resulting array consists of at most maxSplits + 1
subsequences.
Elements that are used to split the sequence are not returned as part of
any subsequence.
The following examples show the effects of the maxSplits
and
omittingEmptySubsequences
parameters when splitting a string at each
space character (" "). The first use of split
returns each word that
was originally separated by one or more spaces.
let
line
=
"BLANCHE: I don't want realism. I want magic!"
(
line
.
characters
.
split
(
separator
:
" "
)
.
map
(
String
.
init
))
// Prints "["BLANCHE:", "I", "don\'t", "want", "realism.", "I", "want", "magic!"]"
The second example passes 1
for the maxSplits
parameter, so the
original string is split just once, into two new strings.
(
line
.
characters
.
split
(
separator
:
" "
,
maxSplits
:
1
)
.
map
(
String
.
init
))
// Prints "["BLANCHE:", " I don\'t want realism. I want magic!"]"
The final example passes false
for the omittingEmptySubsequences
parameter, so the returned array contains empty strings where spaces
were repeated.
(
line
.
characters
.
split
(
separator
:
" "
,
omittingEmptySubsequences
:
false
)
.
map
(
String
.
init
))
// Prints "["BLANCHE:", "", "", "I", "don\'t", "want", "realism.", "I", "want", "magic!"]"
Parameters:
separator: The element that should be split upon.
maxSplits: The maximum number of times to split the sequence, or one
less than the number of subsequences to return. If maxSplits + 1
subsequences are returned, the last one is a suffix of the original
sequence containing the remaining elements. maxSplits
must be
greater than or equal to zero. The default value is Int.max
.
omittingEmptySubsequences: If false
, an empty subsequence is
returned in the result for each consecutive pair of separator
elements in the sequence and for each instance of separator
at the
start or end of the sequence. If true
, only nonempty subsequences
are returned. The default value is true
.
Returns: An array of subsequences, split from this sequence's elements.
Declaration
func
split
(
separator
:
LazySequence
<
Base
>
.
Iterator
.
Element
,
maxSplits
:
Int
=
default
,
omittingEmptySubsequences
:
Bool
=
default
) -
>
[
AnySequence
<
LazySequence
<
Base
>
.
Iterator
.
Element
>
]
Declared In
Sequence
Returns a Boolean value indicating whether the initial elements of the sequence are the same as the elements in another sequence.
This example tests whether one countable range begins with the elements of another countable range.
let
a
=
1
...
3
let
b
=
1
...
10
(
b
.
starts
(
with
:
a
))
// Prints "true"
Passing a sequence with no elements or an empty collection as
possiblePrefix
always results in true
.
(
b
.
starts
(
with
: []))
// Prints "true"
possiblePrefix
: A sequence to compare to this sequence.
Returns: true
if the initial elements of the sequence are the same as
the elements of possiblePrefix
; otherwise, false
. If
possiblePrefix
has no elements, the return value is true
.
See Also: starts(with:by:)
Declaration
func
starts
<
PossiblePrefix
where
PossiblePrefix
:
Sequence
,
PossiblePrefix
.
Iterator
.
Element
==
LazySequence
<
Base
>
.
Iterator
.
Element
>
(
with
possiblePrefix
:
PossiblePrefix
) -
>
Bool
Declared In
Sequence
4 inherited items hidden. (Show all)
Where Iterator.Element : Sequence
Returns the elements of this sequence of sequences, concatenated.
In this example, an array of three ranges is flattened so that the elements of each range can be iterated in turn.
let
ranges
= [
0
..
<
3
,
8
..
<
10
,
15
..
<
17
]
// A for-in loop over 'ranges' accesses each range:
for
range
in
ranges
{
(
range
)
}
// Prints "0..<3"
// Prints "8..<10"
// Prints "15..<17"
// Use 'joined()' to access each element of each range:
for
index
in
ranges
.
joined
() {
(
index
,
terminator
:
" "
)
}
// Prints: "0 1 2 8 9 15 16"
Returns: A flattened view of the elements of this sequence of sequences.
See Also: flatMap(_:)
, joined(separator:)
Declaration
func
joined
() -
>
FlattenSequence
<
LazySequence
<
Base
>
>
Declared In
Sequence
Returns the concatenated elements of this sequence of sequences, inserting the given separator between each element.
This example shows how an array of [Int]
instances can be joined, using
another [Int]
instance as the separator:
let
nestedNumbers
= [[
1
,
2
,
3
], [
4
,
5
,
6
], [
7
,
8
,
9
]]
let
joined
=
nestedNumbers
.
joined
(
separator
: [-
1
, -
2
])
(
Array
(
joined
))
// Prints "[1, 2, 3, -1, -2, 4, 5, 6, -1, -2, 7, 8, 9]"
separator
: A sequence to insert between each of this
sequence's elements.
Returns: The joined sequence of elements.
See Also: joined()
Declaration
func
joined
<
Separator
where
Separator
:
Sequence
,
Separator
.
Iterator
.
Element
==
LazySequence
<
Base
>
.
Iterator
.
Element
.
Iterator
.
Element
>
(
separator
:
Separator
) -
>
JoinedSequence
<
LazySequence
<
Base
>
>
Declared In
Sequence
2 inherited items hidden. (Show all)
Where Iterator.Element : Sequence, Elements.Iterator.Element == Iterator.Element
Returns a lazy sequence that concatenates the elements of this sequence of sequences.
Declaration
func
joined
() -
>
LazySequence
<
FlattenSequence
<
LazySequence
<
Base
>
.
Elements
>
>
Declared In
LazySequenceProtocol
1 inherited item hidden. (Show all)
Where Iterator.Element == String
Returns a new string by concatenating the elements of the sequence, adding the given separator between each element.
The following example shows how an array of strings can be joined to a single, comma-separated string:
let
cast
= [
"Vivien"
,
"Marlon"
,
"Kim"
,
"Karl"
]
let
list
=
cast
.
joined
(
separator
:
", "
)
(
list
)
// Prints "Vivien, Marlon, Kim, Karl"
separator
: A string to insert between each of the elements
in this sequence. The default separator is an empty string.
Returns: A single, concatenated string.
Declaration
Declared In
Sequence
1 inherited item hidden. (Show all)
Where SubSequence : Sequence, SubSequence.SubSequence == SubSequence, SubSequence.Iterator.Element == Iterator.Element
Returns a subsequence by skipping the initial, consecutive elements that satisfy the given predicate.
The following example uses the drop(while:)
method to skip over the
positive numbers at the beginning of the numbers
array. The result
begins with the first element of numbers
that does not satisfy
predicate
.
let
numbers
= [
3
,
7
,
4
, -
2
,
9
, -
6
,
10
,
1
]
let
startingWithNegative
=
numbers
.
drop
(
while
: { $
0
>
0
})
// startingWithNegative == [-2, 9, -6, 10, 1]
If predicate
matches every element in the sequence, the result is an
empty sequence.
predicate
: A closure that takes an element of the sequence as
its argument and returns a Boolean value indicating whether the
element should be included in the result.
Returns: A subsequence starting after the initial, consecutive elements
that satisfy predicate
.
Complexity: O(n), where n is the length of the collection.
See Also: prefix(while:)
Declaration
func
drop
(
while
predicate
: (
LazySequence
<
Base
>
.
Iterator
.
Element
)
throws
-
>
Bool
)
rethrows
-
>
AnySequence
<
LazySequence
<
Base
>
.
Iterator
.
Element
>
Declared In
Sequence
Returns a subsequence containing all but the given number of initial elements.
If the number of elements to drop exceeds the number of elements in the sequence, the result is an empty subsequence.
let
numbers
= [
1
,
2
,
3
,
4
,
5
]
(
numbers
.
dropFirst
(
2
))
// Prints "[3, 4, 5]"
(
numbers
.
dropFirst
(
10
))
// Prints "[]"
n
: The number of elements to drop from the beginning of
the sequence. n
must be greater than or equal to zero.
Returns: A subsequence starting after the specified number of
elements.
Complexity: O(1).
Declaration
func
dropFirst
(
_
n
:
Int
) -
>
AnySequence
<
LazySequence
<
Base
>
.
Iterator
.
Element
>
Declared In
Sequence
Returns a subsequence containing all but the given number of final elements.
The sequence must be finite. If the number of elements to drop exceeds the number of elements in the sequence, the result is an empty subsequence.
let
numbers
= [
1
,
2
,
3
,
4
,
5
]
(
numbers
.
dropLast
(
2
))
// Prints "[1, 2, 3]"
(
numbers
.
dropLast
(
10
))
// Prints "[]"
n
: The number of elements to drop off the end of the
sequence. n
must be greater than or equal to zero.
Returns: A subsequence leaving off the specified number of elements.
Complexity: O(n), where n is the length of the sequence.
Declaration
func
dropLast
(
_
n
:
Int
) -
>
AnySequence
<
LazySequence
<
Base
>
.
Iterator
.
Element
>
Declared In
Sequence
Returns a subsequence, up to the specified maximum length, containing the initial elements of the sequence.
If the maximum length exceeds the number of elements in the sequence, the result contains all the elements in the sequence.
let
numbers
= [
1
,
2
,
3
,
4
,
5
]
(
numbers
.
prefix
(
2
))
// Prints "[1, 2]"
(
numbers
.
prefix
(
10
))
// Prints "[1, 2, 3, 4, 5]"
maxLength
: The maximum number of elements to return. The
value of maxLength
must be greater than or equal to zero.
Returns: A subsequence starting at the beginning of this sequence
with at most maxLength
elements.
Complexity: O(1)
Declaration
func
prefix
(
_
maxLength
:
Int
) -
>
AnySequence
<
LazySequence
<
Base
>
.
Iterator
.
Element
>
Declared In
Sequence
Returns a subsequence containing the initial, consecutive elements that satisfy the given predicate.
The following example uses the prefix(while:)
method to find the
positive numbers at the beginning of the numbers
array. Every element
of numbers
up to, but not including, the first negative value is
included in the result.
let
numbers
= [
3
,
7
,
4
, -
2
,
9
, -
6
,
10
,
1
]
let
positivePrefix
=
numbers
.
prefix
(
while
: { $
0
>
0
})
// positivePrefix == [3, 7, 4]
If predicate
matches every element in the sequence, the resulting
sequence contains every element of the sequence.
predicate
: A closure that takes an element of the sequence as
its argument and returns a Boolean value indicating whether the
element should be included in the result.
Returns: A subsequence of the initial, consecutive elements that
satisfy predicate
.
Complexity: O(n), where n is the length of the collection.
See Also: drop(while:)
Declaration
func
prefix
(
while
predicate
: (
LazySequence
<
Base
>
.
Iterator
.
Element
)
throws
-
>
Bool
)
rethrows
-
>
AnySequence
<
LazySequence
<
Base
>
.
Iterator
.
Element
>
Declared In
Sequence
5 inherited items hidden. (Show all)
A sequence containing the same elements as a
Base
sequence, but on which some operations such asmap
andfilter
are implemented lazily.See Also:
LazySequenceProtocol