4

My types:

data Test = Test {
 a :: Int,
 b :: Int
} deriving (Show)

My parser:

testParser :: Parser Test
testParser = do
  a <- decimal
  tab
  b <- decimal
  return $ Test a b

tab = char '\t'

Now in order to skip the first line, I do something like this:

import qualified System.IO as IO    

parser :: Parser Test
parser = manyTill anyChar endOfLine *> testParser

main = IO.withFile testFile IO.ReadMode $ \testHandle -> runEffect $
         for (parsed (parser <* endOfLine) (fromHandle testHandle)) (lift . print)

But the above parser function makes every alternate link skip (which is obvious). How to only skip the first line in such a way that it works with Pipes ecosystem (Producer should produce a single Test value.) This is one obvious solution which I don't want (the below code will only work if I modify testParser to read newlines) because it returns the entire [Test] instead of a single value:

tests :: Parser [Test]
tests = manyTill anyChar endOfLine *>
        many1 testParser

Any ideas to tackle this problem ?

2
  • By the way, you switch between Test and Link.
    – Zeta
    Jul 10, 2014 at 12:55
  • @Zeta Sorry, that's my mistake. Updated to make it Test. (My original data structure is actually Link which has more fields. I just simplified it to Test for this question.)
    – Sibi
    Jul 10, 2014 at 14:05

2 Answers 2

5

You can drop the first line efficiently in constant space like this:

import Lens.Family (over)
import Pipes.Group (drops)
import Pipes.ByteString (lines)
import Prelude hiding (lines)

dropLine :: Monad m => Producer ByteString m r -> Producer ByteString m r
dropLine = over lines (drops 1)

You can apply dropLine to your Producer before you parse the Producer, like this:

main = IO.withFile testFile IO.ReadMode $ \testHandle -> runEffect $
    let p = dropLine (fromHandle testHandle)
    for (parsed (parser <* endOfLine) p) (lift . print)
2
  • What is don't want to drop a line, but just await lines? Is there a way better than over lines (drops o)?
    – user933161
    Feb 16, 2015 at 14:27
  • @Igor With the exception of Pipes.Prelude, the pipes ecosystem discourages reading entire lines into memory since they could be arbitrarily long. To see how to do this idiomatically, study the Pipes.Group tutorial and check out Pipes.Text.lines Feb 16, 2015 at 20:04
5

If the first line doesn't contain any valid Test, you can use Either () Test in order to handle it:

parserEither :: Parser (Either () Test)
parserEither = Right <$> testParser <* endOfLine 
           <|> Left <$> (manyTill anyChar endOfLine *> pure ())

After this you can use the functions provided by Pipes.Prelude to get rid of the first result (and additionally of all non-parseable lines):

producer p = parsed parserEither p 
         >-> P.drop 1 
         >-> P.filter (either (const False) (const True))
         >-> P.map    (\(Right x) -> x)

main = IO.withFile testFile IO.ReadMode $ \testHandle -> runEffect $
         for (producer (fromHandle testHandle)) (lift . print)

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