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I'm trying to figure out what \\ means in Haskell?

I've got a program that runs perfectly when compiled, implying that \\ is a built-in function, since it's not defined anywhere in the program. However, in GHCi, if I try to use it in the same manner, I get an error saying it's not in the scope.

Does it mean something special in each context?

Here is my code;

module Main where

import Data.List

numbersA = [1, 105, 103, 7, 4, 102, 3, 101, 107, 8, 9]

numbersB = [6, 9, 7, 8, 1, 5, 3, 2, 4]

type Number = Integer

type Run = [Number]

extractRuns :: [Number] -> [Run]
extractRuns [] = []
extractRuns xs = run : extractRuns xs'
                   where run = buildRun (head xs) (tail xs)
                         xs' = xs \\ run

buildRun :: Number -> [Number] -> Run
buildRun seed numbers
  | endRun    = [seed]

  | otherwise = seed : buildRun seed' numbers'
                  where endRun     = successors == []
                        successors = filter (.#. seed) numbers
                        numbers'   = numbers \\ [seed]
                        seed'      = head successors

(.#.) :: Number -> Number -> Bool
x .#. y = x /= y && abs (x - y) < 10

runs = extractRuns numbersA

main = print runs
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  • 22
    Try Hoogle first? Feb 12, 2013 at 4:51
  • I always try Google first... but Hoogle? Never heard of it... Thanks! It has my answer! Feb 12, 2013 at 4:56
  • 3
    Or load up your module in GHCi and do :i (\\) Feb 12, 2013 at 14:28
  • 1
    @CatPlusPlus: (\\) isn't in the Prelude, though -- OP would have to know to load Data.List first.
    – amindfv
    Feb 14, 2013 at 5:46
  • 3
    @amindfv I'm pretty sure I said "or load up your module in GHCi". I can even make a screenshot, because it says so four lines up. Feb 14, 2013 at 18:23

2 Answers 2

30

\\ is the list difference operator. You can use it in GHCi you just have to import Data.List first.

Prelude> :m Data.List
Prelude Data.List> [1..5]\\[3,4]
  [1,2,5]

On a sidenote, this is why I'd suggest avoiding mass imports like import Data.List and to be more specific import Data.List ( (\\) ) so you can be more aware of just what you're importing.

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10

It is the list difference operation. Figuring things like this out is easy if you know to use hoogle.

1
  • 5
    Just heard of it. I will consult Hoogle always before posting questions. Thank you Feb 12, 2013 at 4:56

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