dlist
Difference lists
| LTS Haskell 24.16: | 1.0@rev:2 |
| Stackage Nightly 2025-10-24: | 1.0@rev:2 |
| Latest on Hackage: | 1.0@rev:2 |
dlist-1.0@sha256:854727594c5a816ab3d10f15b1bc4fedaf9e3f7d1ef517a2bb9011f29ba261d2,3942Module documentation for 1.0
- Data
- Data.DList
- Data.DList.Unsafe
- Data.DList
Difference Lists
List-like types supporting O(1) append and snoc operations.
Installation
dlist is a Haskell package available from Hackage.
It can be installed with cabal or stack.
See the change log for the changes in each version.
Usage
Here is an example of “flattening” a Tree into a list of the elements in its
Leaf constructors:
import qualified Data.DList as DList
data Tree a = Leaf a | Branch (Tree a) (Tree a)
flattenSlow :: Tree a -> [a]
flattenSlow = go
where
go (Leaf x) = [x]
go (Branch left right) = go left ++ go right
flattenFast :: Tree a -> [a]
flattenFast = DList.toList . go
where
go (Leaf x) = DList.singleton x
go (Branch left right) = go left `DList.append` go right
(The above code can be found in the benchmark.)
flattenSlow is likely to be slower than flattenFast:
-
flattenSlowuses++to concatenate lists, each of which is recursively constructed from theleftandrightTreevalues in theBranchconstructor. -
flattenFastdoes not use++but constructs a composition of functions, each of which is a “cons” introduced byDList.singleton((x :)). The functionDList.toListapplies the composed function to[], constructing a list in the end.
To see the difference between flattenSlow and flattenFast, consider some
rough evaluations of the functions applied to a Tree:
flattenSlow (Branch (Branch (Leaf 'a') (Leaf 'b')) (Leaf 'c'))
= go (Branch (Branch (Leaf 'a') (Leaf 'b')) (Leaf 'c'))
= go (Branch (Leaf 'a') (Leaf 'b')) ++ go (Leaf 'c')
= (go (Leaf 'a') ++ go (Leaf 'b')) ++ "c"
= ("a" ++ "b") ++ "c"
= ('a' : [] ++ "b") ++ "c"
= ('a' : "b") ++ "c"
= 'a' : "b" ++ "c"
= 'a' : 'b' : [] ++ "c"
= 'a' : 'b' : "c"
flattenFast (Branch (Branch (Leaf 'a') (Leaf 'b')) (Leaf 'c'))
= toList $ go (Branch (Branch (Leaf 'a') (Leaf 'b')) (Leaf 'c'))
= toList $ go (Branch (Leaf 'a') (Leaf 'b')) `append` go (Leaf 'c')
= unsafeApplyDList (go (Branch (Leaf 'a') (Leaf 'b'))) . unsafeApplyDList (go (Leaf 'c')) $ []
= unsafeApplyDList (go (Branch (Leaf 'a') (Leaf 'b'))) (unsafeApplyDList (go (Leaf 'c')) [])
= unsafeApplyDList (go (Branch (Leaf 'a') (Leaf 'b'))) (unsafeApplyDList (singleton 'c') [])
= unsafeApplyDList (go (Branch (Leaf 'a') (Leaf 'b'))) (unsafeApplyDList (UnsafeDList ((:) 'c')) [])
= unsafeApplyDList (go (Branch (Leaf 'a') (Leaf 'b'))) "c"
= unsafeApplyDList (UnsafeDList (unsafeApplyDList (go (Leaf 'a')) . unsafeApplyDList (go (Leaf 'b')))) "c"
= unsafeApplyDList (go (Leaf 'a')) (unsafeApplyDList (go (Leaf 'b')) "c")
= unsafeApplyDList (go (Leaf 'a')) (unsafeApplyDList (singleton 'b') "c")
= unsafeApplyDList (go (Leaf 'a')) (unsafeApplyDList (UnsafeDList ((:) 'b')) "c")
= unsafeApplyDList (go (Leaf 'a')) ('b' : "c")
= unsafeApplyDList (singleton 'a') ('b' : "c")
= unsafeApplyDList (UnsafeDList ((:) 'a')) ('b' : "c")
= 'a' : 'b' : "c"
The left-nested ++ in flattenSlow results in intermediate list constructions
that are immediately discarded in the evaluation of the outermost ++. On the
other hand, the evaluation of flattenFast involves no intermediate list
construction but rather function applications and newtype constructor wrapping
and unwrapping. This is where the efficiency comes from.
Warning! Note that there is truth in the above, but there is also a lot of
hand-waving and intrinsic complexity. For example, there may be GHC rewrite
rules that apply to ++, which will change the actual evaluation. And, of
course, strictness, laziness, and sharing all play a significant role. Also, not
every function in the dlist package is the most efficient for every situation.
Moral of the story: If you are using dlist to speed up your code, check
to be sure that it actually does. Benchmark!
Design Notes
These are some notes on design and development choices made for the dlist
package.
Avoid ++
The original intent of Hughes’ representation of lists as first-class functions
was to provide an abstraction such that the list append operation found in
functional programming languages (and now called ++ in Haskell) would not
appear in left-nested positions to avoid duplicated structure as lists are
constructed. The lesson learned by many people using list over the years is that
the append operation can appear, sometimes surprisingly, in places they don’t
expect it.
One of our goals is for the dlist package to avoid surprising its users with
unexpected insertions of ++. Towards this end, there should be a minimal set
of functions in dlist in which ++ can be directly or indirectly found. The
list of known uses of ++ includes:
DList:fromList,fromString,readDNonEmpty:fromList,fromNonEmpty,fromString,read
If any future requested functions involve ++ (e.g. via fromList), the burden
of inclusion is higher than it would be otherwise.
Abstraction
The DList representation and its supporting functions (e.g. append, snoc,
etc.) rely on an invariant to preserve its safe use. That is, without this
invariant, a user may encounter unexpected outcomes.
(We use safety in the sense that the semantics are well-defined and expected,
not in the sense of side of referential transparency. The invariant does not
directly lead to side effects in the dlist package, but a program that uses an
unsafely generated DList may do something surprising.)
The invariant is that, for any xs :: DList a:
fromList (toList xs) = xs
To see how this invariant can be broken, consider this example:
xs :: DList a
xs = UnsafeDList (const [])
fromList (toList (xs `snoc` 1))
= fromList (toList (UnsafeDList (const []) `snoc` 1))
= fromList (toList (UnsafeDList (unsafeApplyDList (UnsafeDList (const [])) . (x :))))
= fromList (toList (UnsafeDList (const [] . (x :))))
= fromList (($ []) . unsafeApplyDList $ UnsafeDList (const [] . (x :)))
= fromList (const [] . (x :) $ [])
= fromList (const [] [x])
= fromList []
= UnsafeDList (++ [])
The invariant can also be stated as:
toList (fromList (toList xs)) = toList xs
And we can restate the example as:
toList (fromList (toList (xs `snoc` 1)))
= toList (UnsafeDList (++ []))
= []
It would be rather unhelpful and surprising to find (xs `snoc` 1) turned out
to be the empty list.
To preserve the invariant on DList, we provide it as an abstract type in the
Data.DList module. The constructor, UnsafeDList, and record label,
unsafeApplyDList, are not exported because these can be used, as shown above,
to break the invariant.
All of that said, there have been numerous requests to export the DList
constructor. We are not convinced that it is necessary, but we are convinced
that users should decide for themselves.
To use the constructor and record label of DList, you import them as follows:
import Data.DList.Unsafe (DList(UnsafeDList, unsafeApplyDList))
If you are using Safe Haskell, you may need to add this at the top of your module:
{-# LANGUAGE Trustworthy #-}
Just be aware that the burden of proof for safety is on you.
References
These are various references where you can learn more about difference lists.
Research
-
A novel representation of lists and its application to the function “reverse.” John Hughes. Information Processing Letters. Volume 22, Issue 3. 1986-03. Pages 141-144. PDF
This is the original published source for a representation of lists as first-class functions.
Background
Blogs and Mailing Lists
- Using Difference Lists. Douglas M. Auclair. 2008-08-13.
- A Sort of Difference. Edward Kmett. 2008-09-18.
- Reference for technique wanted. Richard O’Keefe, et al. 2010-10-31.
- 24 Days of Hackage: dlist. Oliver Charles. 2012-12-14.
- Constructing a list in a Monad. Joachim Breitner. 2013-11-13.
- Demystifying DList (Reddit). Tom Ellis. 2014-01-24.
- keepEquals with Difference Lists. Douglas M. Auclair. 2014-06-21.
Books
- Chapter 13. Data Structures. Real World Haskell. 2008-12-05.
License
BSD 3-Clause “New” or “Revised” License © Don Stewart, Sean Leather, contributors
Changes
Change Log
Unreleased
No unreleased changes at this time.
v1.0
Released on 2020-07-18, Nelson Mandela International Day.
Added
intercalateforDList(#43, Jacob Leach)Traversableinstance forDList(#45, Veronika Romashkina)Data.DList.Internalfor theDListimplementation,Data.DList.Unsafefor exporting theDListconstructorUnsafeDListand record labelunsafeApplyDList(#55, #59)Data.DList.DNonEmpty(#60)- GitHub Action for uploading a release (#74)
dlist-bench, a benchmark package (#71)
Changed
stimesforDListdefined withstimesMonoid(#46, Janek Spaderna)- Type of
tail:DList a -> DList atoDList a -> [a](#69) - GitHub Action for continuous integration testing to replace Travis-CI (#47, #50)
- GHC warning and error improvements (#72, #73)
- Improved documentation (#55, #70, #76, #77)
Removed
list :: b -> (a -> DList a -> b) -> DList a -> b(#69)
v0.8.0.8
Released on 2020-04-02, World Autism Awareness Day.
Added
toListin theFoldableinstance forDList(#36, Ryan Scott)
Changed
QuickCheckupper bound: 2.14 to 2.15 (a7ea60d)
Fixed
- Documented time complexity of
headforDList(#35, Simon Jakobi)
v0.8.0.7
Released on 2019-08-05, Independence Day in Burkina Faso.
Added
MonadFailinstance forDList(#32, Vanessa McHale)
Changed
deepsequpper bound: 2 to 1.5 (#33, Herbert Valerio Riedel)
v0.8.0.6
Released on 2019-03-29, Martyrs’ Day in Madagascar.
Changed
QuickCheckupper bound: 2.13 to 2.14 (242511c)
v0.8.0.5
Released on 2018-09-13, Day of the Programmer.
Changed
QuickCheckupper bound: 2.12 to 2.13 (0e2b3a5)
v0.8.0.4
Released on 2018-01-19, Kokborok Day.
Added
{-# LANGUAGE Trustworthy #-}inData.DList(#31, Bertram Felgenhauer)
Changed
QuickCheckupper bound: 2.11 to 2.12 (3d9c8ad)QuickChecklower bound: 2.7/2.9 to 2.10 (4f92012)Arbitrary,Arbitrary1instances forNonEmptyin the test suite copied fromquickcheck-instances(4f92012)
v0.8.0.3
Released on 2017-07-04, Independence Day in the United States.
Added
quickcheck-instancesdependency in the test suite for theArbitrary,Arbitrary1instances forNonEmpty(5b41d0d)
Changed
QuickCheckupper bound: 2.10 to 2.11 (b2f791a)
Fixed
stimesproperty in the test suite (#30, Oleg Grenrus)
v0.8.0.2
Released on 2016-09-04, World Sexual Health Day.
Fixed
- Missing module
OverloadedStringsin the test suite (#29, Sergei Trofimovich)
v0.8.0.1
Released on 2016-07-29, the 58th Anniversary of the Creation of NASA.
Changed
QuickChecklower bound: 2.7 to 2.9 for GHC >= 8 (#28, Adam Bergmark)
v0.8
Released on 2016-07-17, Constitution Day in South Korea.
Added
- Pattern synonyms
NilandCons(#15) Semigroupinstance forDList(#25)- Canonical
ApplicativeandMonadinstances forDList(#23, Herbert Valerio Riedel)
Changed
IsStringinstance forDListis no longer flexible (#26, Baldur Blöndal)QuickCheckupper bound: 2.9 to 2.10 (ef7eac5)
v0.7.1.2
Released on 2015-08-23, International Day for the Remembrance of the Slave Trade and its Abolition.
Fixed
- Imports causing warnings in GHC 7.10 (#22, Mikhail Glushenkov)
v0.7.1.1
Released on 2015-03-19, St. Joseph’s Day.
Changed
v0.7.1
Released on 2014-06-28, the 100th Anniversary of the Assassination of Franz Ferdinand.
Added
IsListinstance forDList(#13, Baldur Blöndal)
v0.7.0.1
Released on 2014-03-24, World Tuberculosis Day.
Changed
QuickCheckupper bound: 2.7 to 2.8 (7494dbc)
v0.7
Released on 2014-03-17, St. Patrick’s Day.
Added
NFDatainstance forDList(#10, Evan Laforge)IsStringinstance forDList(771a38d)
Changed
baselower bound: 2 to 4 (77f6898)
Removed
DListconstructor and record label,maybeReturn(62c0c09)
v0.6.0.1
Released on 2013-12-01, World AIDS Day.
Changed
QuickChecklower bound: 2.6 to 2.5 (#9, Michael Snoyman)
v0.6
Released on 2013-11-29, Black Friday.
Added
applyto replaceDListrecord labelunDL(#4)Eq,Ord,Show, andAlternativeinstances forDList(#1, Bas van Dijk)Readinstance forDList(58ef305)Foldableinstance forDList(5b1d09f)- Travis-CI for continuous integration testing (#6, Herbert Valerio Riedel)
Changed
- Maintenance: Don Stewart to Sean Leather (#2, Bas van Dijk)
- Repository:
http://code.haskell.org/~dons/code/dlist/tohttps://github.com/spl/dlist baselower bound: 0 to 2 (6e1d9e7)
Fixed
- Test suite simplified and changed to use
cabal test(9f58759)
Deprecated
- Exported
DListconstructor and record label,maybeReturn(#4)