Trying to learn F# but got confused when trying to distinguish between fold and reduce. Fold seems to do the same thing but takes an extra parameter. Is there a legitimate reason for these two functions to exist or they are there to accommodate people with different backgrounds? (E.g.: String and string in C#)

Here is code snippet copied from sample:

let sumAList list =
    List.reduce (fun acc elem -> acc + elem) list

let sumAFoldingList list =
    List.fold (fun acc elem -> acc + elem) 0 list

printfn "Are these two the same? %A " 
             (sumAList [2; 4; 10] = sumAFoldingList [2; 4; 10])
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You can write reduce and fold in terms of each other, e.g. fold f a l can be written as reduce f a::l. – Neil Jan 29 at 19:13
4  
@Neil - Implementing fold in terms of reduce is more complicated than that - the type of accumulator of fold does not have to be the same as the type of things in the list! – Tomas Petricek Jan 29 at 19:18
@TomasPetricek My mistake, I originally intended to write it the other way around. – Neil Jan 29 at 19:28
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3 Answers

up vote 11 down vote accepted

Fold takes an explicit initial value for the accumulator while reduce uses the first element of the input list as the initial accumulator value.

As a result, reduce throws an exception on an empty input list.

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In addition to what Lee said, you can define reduce in terms of fold, but not (easily) the other way round:

let reduce f list = 
  match list with
  | head::tail -> List.fold f head tail
  | [] -> failwith "The list was empty!"

The fact that fold takes an explicit initial value for the accumulator also means that the result of the fold function can have a different type than the type of values in the list. For example, you can use accumulator of type string to concatenate all numbers in a list into a textual representation:

[1 .. 10] |> List.fold (fun str n -> str + "," + (string n)) ""

When using reduce, the type of accumulator is the same as the type of values in the list - this means that if you have a list of numbers, the result will have to be a number. To implement the previous sample, you'd have to convert the numbers to string first and then accumulate:

[1 .. 10] |> List.map string
          |> List.reduce (fun s1 s2 -> s1 + "," + s2)
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Wish I could up-vote you, but I'm still not cool enough for that, the least I could thank you =] – Wallace Jan 29 at 19:20
1  
Upvoted for ya ;) – Bryan Edds Jan 29 at 22:08
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Let's look at their signatures:

> List.reduce;;
val it : (('a -> 'a -> 'a) -> 'a list -> 'a) = <fun:clo@1>
> List.fold;;
val it : (('a -> 'b -> 'a) -> 'a -> 'b list -> 'a) = <fun:clo@2-1>

There are some important differences:

  • While reduce works on one type of elements only, the accumulator and list elements in fold could be in different types.
  • With reduce, you apply a function f to every list element starting from the first one:

    f (... (f i0 i1) i2 ...) iN.

    With fold, you apply f starting from the accumulator s:

    f (... (f s i0) i1 ...) iN.

Therefore, reduce results in an ArgumentException on empty list. Moreover, fold is more generic than reduce; you can use fold to implement reduce easily.

In some cases, using reduce is more succinct:

// Return the last element in the list
let last xs = List.reduce (fun _ x -> x) xs

or more convenient if there's not any reasonable accumulator:

// Intersect a list of sets altogether
let intersectMany xss = List.reduce (fun acc xs -> Set.intersect acc xs) xss

In general, fold is more powerful with an accumulator of an arbitrary type:

// Reverse a list using an empty list as the accumulator
let rev xs = List.fold (fun acc x -> x::acc) [] xs
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