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I'm trying to learn about catamorphisms and I've read the Wikipedia article and the first couple posts in the series of the topic for F# on the Inside F# blog.

I understand that it's a generalization of folds (i.e., mapping a structure of many values to one value, including a list of values to another list). And I gather that the fold-list and fold-tree is a canonical example.

Can this be shown to be done in C#, using LINQ's Aggregate operator or some other higher-order method?

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It would be super awesome if the answers here could be integrated into the Wikipedia article. – Ambush Commander Oct 12 '08 at 23:35
Just be careful of creating a circular reference. – Joel Coehoorn Oct 12 '08 at 23:37
Catamorphisms break down lists, so nothing is created. Are you refering to folding cyclic graphs or anamorphisms (building up lists)? – Mark Cidade Oct 12 '08 at 23:48

2 Answers

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LINQ's Aggregate() is just for IEnumerables. Catamorphisms in general refer to the pattern of folding for an arbitrary data type. So Aggregate() is to IEnumerables what FoldTree (below) is to Trees (below); both are catamorphisms for their respective data types.

I translated some of the code in part 4 of the series into C#. The code is below. Note that the equivalent F# used three less-than characters (for generic type parameter annotations), whereas this C# code uses more than 60. This is evidence why no one writes such code in C# - there are too many type annotations. I present the code in case it helps people who know C# but not F# play with this. But the code is so dense in C#, it's very hard to make sense of.

using System;
using System.Collections.Generic;
using System.Windows;
using System.Windows.Controls;
using System.Windows.Input;
using System.Windows.Media;
using System.Windows.Shapes;

class Tree<T>   // use null for Leaf
{
    public T Data { get; private set; }
    public Tree<T> Left { get; private set; }
    public Tree<T> Right { get; private set; }
    public Tree(T x, Tree<T> l, Tree<T> r)
    {
        this.Data = x;
        this.Left = l;
        this.Right = r;
    }
}
class Tree
{
    public static Tree<T> Node<T>(T x, Tree<T> l, Tree<T> r) { return new Tree<T>(x, l, r); }
    public static Tree<int> Tree7 = Node(4, Node(2, Node(1, null, null), Node(3, null, null)),
                                            Node(6, Node(5, null, null), Node(7, null, null)));
    public static R XFoldTree<A, R>(Func<A, R, R, Tree<A>, R> nodeF, Func<Tree<A>, R> leafV, Tree<A> tree)
    {
        return Loop(nodeF, leafV, tree, x => x);
    }
    public static R Loop<A, R>(Func<A, R, R, Tree<A>, R> nodeF, Func<Tree<A>, R> leafV, Tree<A> t, Func<R, R> cont)
    {
        if (t == null)
            return cont(leafV(t));
        else
            return Loop(nodeF, leafV, t.Left, lacc =>
                   Loop(nodeF, leafV, t.Right, racc =>
                   cont(nodeF(t.Data, lacc, racc, t))));
    }
    public static R FoldTree<A, R>(Func<A, R, R, R> nodeF, R leafV, Tree<A> tree)
    {
        return XFoldTree((x, l, r, _) => nodeF(x, l, r), _ => leafV, tree);
    }
    public static Func<Tree<A>, Tree<A>> XNode<A>(A x, Tree<A> l, Tree<A> r)
    {
        return (Tree<A> t) => x.Equals(t.Data) && l == t.Left && r == t.Right ? t : Node(x, l, r);
    }
    // DiffTree: Tree<'a> * Tree<'a> -> Tree<'a * bool> 
    // return second tree with extra bool 
    // the bool signifies whether the Node "ReferenceEquals" the first tree 
    public static Tree<KeyValuePair<A, bool>> DiffTree<A>(Tree<A> tree, Tree<A> tree2)
    {
        return XFoldTree((A x, Func<Tree<A>, Tree<KeyValuePair<A, bool>>> l, Func<Tree<A>, Tree<KeyValuePair<A, bool>>> r, Tree<A> t) => (Tree<A> t2) =>
            Node(new KeyValuePair<A, bool>(t2.Data, object.ReferenceEquals(t, t2)),
                 l(t2.Left), r(t2.Right)),
            x => y => null, tree)(tree2);
    }
}
class Example
{
    // original version recreates entire tree, yuck 
    public static Tree<int> Change5to0(Tree<int> tree)
    {
        return Tree.FoldTree((int x, Tree<int> l, Tree<int> r) => Tree.Node(x == 5 ? 0 : x, l, r), null, tree);
    }
    // here it is with XFold - same as original, only with Xs 
    public static Tree<int> XChange5to0(Tree<int> tree)
    {
        return Tree.XFoldTree((int x, Tree<int> l, Tree<int> r, Tree<int> orig) =>
            Tree.XNode(x == 5 ? 0 : x, l, r)(orig), _ => null, tree);
    }
}
class MyWPFWindow : Window 
{
    void Draw(Canvas canvas, Tree<KeyValuePair<int, bool>> tree)
    {
        // assumes canvas is normalized to 1.0 x 1.0 
        Tree.FoldTree((KeyValuePair<int, bool> kvp, Func<Transform, Transform> l, Func<Transform, Transform> r) => trans =>
        {
            // current node in top half, centered left-to-right 
            var tb = new TextBox();
            tb.Width = 100.0; 
            tb.Height = 100.0;
            tb.FontSize = 70.0;
                // the tree is a "diff tree" where the bool represents 
                // "ReferenceEquals" differences, so color diffs Red 
            tb.Foreground = (kvp.Value ? Brushes.Black : Brushes.Red);
            tb.HorizontalContentAlignment = HorizontalAlignment.Center;
            tb.VerticalContentAlignment = VerticalAlignment.Center;
            tb.RenderTransform = AddT(trans, TranslateT(0.25, 0.0, ScaleT(0.005, 0.005, new TransformGroup())));
            tb.Text = kvp.Key.ToString();
            canvas.Children.Add(tb);
            // left child in bottom-left quadrant 
            l(AddT(trans, TranslateT(0.0, 0.5, ScaleT(0.5, 0.5, new TransformGroup()))));
            // right child in bottom-right quadrant 
            r(AddT(trans, TranslateT(0.5, 0.5, ScaleT(0.5, 0.5, new TransformGroup()))));
            return null;
        }, _ => null, tree)(new TransformGroup());
    }

    public MyWPFWindow(Tree<KeyValuePair<int, bool>> tree)
    {
        var canvas = new Canvas();
        canvas.Width=1.0;
        canvas.Height=1.0;
        canvas.Background = Brushes.Blue;
        canvas.LayoutTransform=new ScaleTransform(200.0, 200.0);
        Draw(canvas, tree);
        this.Content = canvas;
        this.Title = "MyWPFWindow";
        this.SizeToContent = SizeToContent.WidthAndHeight;
    }
    TransformGroup AddT(Transform t, TransformGroup tg) { tg.Children.Add(t); return tg; }
    TransformGroup ScaleT(double x, double y, TransformGroup tg) { tg.Children.Add(new ScaleTransform(x,y)); return tg; }
    TransformGroup TranslateT(double x, double y, TransformGroup tg) { tg.Children.Add(new TranslateTransform(x,y)); return tg; }

    [STAThread]
    static void Main(string[] args)
    {
        var app = new Application();
        //app.Run(new MyWPFWindow(Tree.DiffTree(Tree.Tree7,Example.Change5to0(Tree.Tree7))));
        app.Run(new MyWPFWindow(Tree.DiffTree(Tree.Tree7, Example.XChange5to0(Tree.Tree7))));
    }
}
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vote up 4 vote down

I've been doing more reading, including a Micorosft Research paper on functional programming with catamorphisms ("bananas"), and it seems that catamorphism just refers to any function that takes a list and typically breaks it down to a single value (IEnumerable<A> => B), like Max(), Min(), and in the general case, Aggregate(), would all be a catamorphisms for lists.

I was previously under the impression that it refered to a way of creating a function that can generalize different folds, so that it can fold a tree and a list. There may actually still be such a thing, some kind of functor or arrow maybe but right now that's beyond my level of understanding.

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Why did you ask a question and then just answer it immediately yourself? Obviously you already know the answer. – Phil Wright Oct 12 '08 at 23:52
I didn't know the answer when I posted the question and didn't anticipate that I'd come across something short after that that would give me the answer. I still don't know if that's all there is to it. StackOverflow users are encouraged to answer their own question. – Mark Cidade Oct 13 '08 at 0:04

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