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Let's say I want all permutations of 2 letters out of a, b and c.

I can do:

my @perm = <a b c>.combinations(2)».permutations;
say @perm;
# [((a b) (b a)) ((a c) (c a)) ((b c) (c b))]

which is close, but not exactly what I need. How do I “flatten” this so that I get:

# [(a b) (b a) (a c) (c a) (b c) (c b)]

?

2

4 Answers 4

14

See also "a better way to accomplish what I (OP) wanted".

See also "Some possible solutions" answer to "How can I completely flatten a Raku list (of lists (of lists) … )" question.

Add a subscript

my \perm = <a b c>.combinations(2)».permutations;
say perm;       # (((a b) (b a)) ((a c) (c a)) ((b c) (c b)))
say perm[*];    # (((a b) (b a)) ((a c) (c a)) ((b c) (c b)))
say perm[*;*];  # ((a b) (b a) (a c) (c a) (b c) (c b))
say perm[*;*;*] # (a b b a a c c a b c c b)

Notes

I used a non-sigil'd variable because I think it's a bit clearer what's going on for those who don't know Raku.

I didn't append the subscript to the original expression but I could have:

my \perm = <a b c>.combinations(2)».permutations[*;*];
say perm;       # ((a b) (b a) (a c) (c a) (b c) (c b))
2
  • I like the [*;*] trick to “flatten” the list of lists! I don't like the sigil-less variable, though, which is a lot less clear for those of us who do know Perl (5 or 6).
    – mscha
    May 16, 2016 at 22:36
  • @Larry's speculation/specification of multidimensional arrays makes interesting reading. Some of the simpler parts of it like this "trick" have already been implemented in v6.c and the Rakudo Perl 6 compiler.
    – raiph
    May 17, 2016 at 1:50
10

Ultimately, you are building your list the wrong way to begin with. You can slip your permutations into the outer list like this.

<a b c>.combinations(2).map(|*.permutations);

Which yields the following list

((a b) (b a) (a c) (c a) (b c) (c b)) 

According to the Bench module, this is about 300% faster than doing

<a b c>.combinations(2).map(*.permutations)[*;*]
1
  • 1
    Thanks, this is indeed a better way to accomplish what I wanted. I'm not marking this as the best answer, though, because it isn't strictly an answer to the question I asked. :)
    – mscha
    Aug 19, 2016 at 14:32
9

By inserting slips as appropriate, eg via

<a b c>.combinations(2).map(*.permutations.Slip).Array

or

[ slip .permutations for <a b c>.combinations(2) ]

Invoking .Array in the first example is unnecessary if you're fine with a Seq, and can be replaced with calls to .list or .cache (supplied by PositionalBindFailover) if mutability is not needed.

In the second example, the prefix | operator could be used instead of the slip sub.

6
  • ». and map are not equivalent. The former is a candidate for auto-threading. Creating a LoL with one less level may not be what he wants.
    – user5854207
    May 11, 2016 at 23:41
  • @gfldex: you can always throw in a .hyper call if that's what you want; also note that in your example, the list of combinations gets iterated twice
    – Christoph
    May 12, 2016 at 8:39
  • Thanks, .Slip is the trick I needed. Too bad that ».Slip doesn't seem to work...
    – mscha
    May 12, 2016 at 10:22
  • @mscha: hyperoperators descend into nested structures, so you're slipping the single-element leaves, which is a noop
    – Christoph
    May 12, 2016 at 14:35
  • @Christoph, I don't think that is true, otherwise the ».permutations part wouldn't have worked either.
    – mscha
    May 12, 2016 at 21:13
5
my @perm = <a b c>.combinations(2)».permutations;
dd [ @perm.map(*.Slip) ]
# OUTPUT«[("a", "b"), ("b", "a"), ("a", "c"), ("c", "a"), ("b", "c"), ("c", "b")]␤»

However, you may be better of to destructure the LoL when you use it later in the program. A map on a long list can take a jolly long time.

1
  • Thanks, .Slip is the trick I needed. Too bad that ».Slip doesn't seem to work...
    – mscha
    May 12, 2016 at 10:23

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