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Feature #6636
closedEnumerable#size
Description
Now that it has been made clear that Enumerable#count
never calls #size
and that we have Enumerable#lazy
, let me propose again an API for a lazy way to get the size of an Enumerable: Enumerable#size
.
- call-seq:
- enum.size # => nil, Integer or Float::INFINITY
- Returns the number of elements that will be yielded, without going through
- the iteration (i.e. lazy), or +nil+ if it can't be calculated lazily.
- perm = (1..100).to_a.permutation(4)
- perm.size # => 94109400
- perm.each_cons(2).size # => 94109399
- loop.size # => Float::INFINITY
- [42].drop_while.size # => nil
About 66 core methods returning enumerators would have a lazy size
, like each_slice
, permutation
or lazy.take
.
A few would have size
return nil
:
Array#{r}index, {take|drop}_while
Enumerable#find{_index}, {take|drop}_while
IO: all methods
Sized enumerators can also be created naturally by providing a block to to_enum
/enum_for
or a lambda to Enumerator.new
.
Example for to_enum
:
class Integer
def composition
return to_enum(:composition){ 1 << (self - 1) } unless block_given?
yield [] if zero?
downto(1) do |i|
(self - i).composition do |comp|
yield [i, *comp]
end
end
end
end
4.composition.to_a
# => [[4], [3, 1], [2, 2], [2, 1, 1], [1, 3], [1, 2, 1], [1, 1, 2], [1, 1, 1, 1]]
42.composition.size # => 2199023255552
Example for Enumerator.new
:
def lazy_product(*enums)
sizer = ->{
enums.inject(1) do |product, e|
break if (size = e.size).nil?
product * size
end
}
Enumerator.new(sizer) do |yielder|
# ... generate combinations
end
end
lazy_product(1..4, (1..3).each_cons(2)).size # => 8
lazy_product(1..4, (1..3).cycle).size # => Float::INFINITY
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