:: Ord a => [a] -> [a] -package:text-short -package:statistics -is:exact -package:Cabal -package:base-prelude package:Cabal-syntax

The sort function implements a stable sorting algorithm. It is a special case of sortBy, which allows the programmer to supply their own comparison function. Elements are arranged from lowest to highest, keeping duplicates in the order they appeared in the input.
>>> sort [1,6,4,3,2,5]
[1,2,3,4,5,6]
The argument must be finite.
Like nub, but has O(n log n) complexity instead of O(n^2). Code for ordNub and listUnion taken from Niklas Hambüchen's ordnub package.
A right-biased version of ordNub. Example:
>>> ordNub [1,2,1] :: [Int]
[1,2]
>>> ordNubRight [1,2,1] :: [Int]
[2,1]
cycle ties a finite list into a circular one, or equivalently, the infinite repetition of the original list. It is the identity on infinite lists.
>>> cycle []
*** Exception: Prelude.cycle: empty list

>>> cycle [42]
[42,42,42,42,42,42,42,42,42,42...

>>> cycle [2, 5, 7]
[2,5,7,2,5,7,2,5,7,2,5,7...
reverse xs returns the elements of xs in reverse order. xs must be finite.
>>> reverse []
[]

>>> reverse [42]
[42]

>>> reverse [2,5,7]
[7,5,2]

>>> reverse [1..]
* Hangs forever *
A total variant of tail.
A total variant of init.
List of elements of a structure, from left to right. If the entire list is intended to be reduced via a fold, just fold the structure directly bypassing the list.

Examples

Basic usage:
>>> toList Nothing
[]
>>> toList (Just 42)
[42]
>>> toList (Left "foo")
[]
>>> toList (Node (Leaf 5) 17 (Node Empty 12 (Leaf 8)))
[5,17,12,8]
For lists, toList is the identity:
>>> toList [1, 2, 3]
[1,2,3]
Take a parser that may consume input, and on failure, go back to where we started and fail as if we didn't consume input.
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