Haskell has the sum function
sum :: Num a => [a] -> a
Which can be nicely composed to sum a matrix by
sum . map sum :: Num a => [[a]] -> a
Going deeper, however, such as summing a cube, creates the restriction Num [a]
sum . map sum . map sum :: (Num a, Num [a]) => [[[a]]] -> a
Which, if you think about it, is natural. So with the former attempt to define the sumcube function blowing up in one's face, we need to find a different path. One such attempt would be:
sum . map sum . map (map sum) :: Num a => [[[a]]] -> a
Which seems nowhere as natural as the summatrix function.
In my quest to posessing the mental tools for problem solving in Haskell, I am interested in knowing how to tackle this problem of summing a structure of any depth by, say, stacking map sums as in my third code example. Is this at all possible? And in that case, how would you do it?
sum . map (map sum)? – FUZxxl Dec 21 '11 at 17:29