2

How can a fold be implemented as a for-comprehension in Scala? I see the only way is to use some recursive call? This is a try that is failing, not sure how to do this? What is the best way to implement fold as a for-comprehension

  val nums = List(1,2,3)                         
  nums.fold(0)(_+_)                              
  def recFold(acc: Int = 0): Int = {
    (for {
        a <- nums
        b = recFold(a + acc)
    } yield b).head
  }                                               
    recFold(0) //Stack overflow
2
  • Im not too experienced with scala, but i dont see a base case return from your recursive calls? Sep 21, 2016 at 14:08
  • Using head is unsafe
    – cchantep
    Sep 21, 2016 at 14:15

2 Answers 2

2

If you really want to use for, you don't need recursion, but you would need a mutable variable:

val nums = List(1,2,3)

def recFold(zero: Int)(op: (Int, Int) => Int): Int = {
  var result: Int = zero
  for { a <- nums } result = op(result, a)
  result
}

recFold(0)(_ + _) // 6

Which is pretty similar to how foldLeft is actually implemented in TraversableOnce:

def foldLeft[B](z: B)(op: (B, A) => B): B = {
  var result = z
  this foreach (x => result = op(result, x))
  result
}
1

Fold can be implemented both ways right to left or left to right. No need to use for plus recursion. Recursion is enough.

  def foldRight[A, B](as: List[A], z: B)(f: (A, B) => B): B = {
    as match {
      case Nil => z
      case x :: xs => f(x, foldRight(xs, z)(f))
    }
  }

  @annotation.tailrec
  def foldLeft[A, B](as: List[A], z: B)(f: (A, B) => B): B = {
    as match {
      case Nil => z
      case x :: xs => foldLeft(xs, f(x, z))(f)
    }
  }
1
  • I was just interested if there where some super smart way to use a for as always seems to be the case in FP... Sep 21, 2016 at 14:27

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