map -package:containers -package:base-prelude -package:charset -package:bytestring -package:invertible -package:base -package:ghc -package:imports -package:aeson package:hedgehog

Generates a map using a Range to determine the length. This may fail to generate anything if the keys produced by the generator do not account for a large enough number of unique items to satify the required map size.
Generates a value which is the result of the given function returning a Just. The original generator's shrink tree will be retained, with values returning Nothing removed. Subsequent shrinks of those values will be retained. Compared to mapMaybeT, shrinking may be slower but will be optimal. It's possible that the function will never return Just, or will only do so a larger size than we're currently running at. To avoid looping forever, we limit the number of retries, and grow the size with each retry. If we retry too many times then the whole generator is discarded.
Generates a value which is the result of the given function returning a Just. The original generator's shrink tree will be retained, with values returning Nothing removed. Subsequent shrinks of those values will be retained. Compared to mapMaybeT, shrinking may be slower but will be optimal. The type is also more general, because the shrink behavior from mapMaybe would force the entire shrink tree to be evaluated when applied to an impure tree. It's possible that the function will never return Just, or will only do so a larger size than we're currently running at. To avoid looping forever, we limit the number of retries, and grow the size with each retry. If we retry too many times then the whole generator is discarded.
Map over a generator's shrink tree.
Map each element of a structure to a monadic action, evaluate these actions from left to right, and collect the results. For a version that ignores the results see mapM_.

Examples

mapM is literally a traverse with a type signature restricted to Monad. Its implementation may be more efficient due to additional power of Monad.
Map each element of a structure to a monadic action, evaluate these actions from left to right, and ignore the results. For a version that doesn't ignore the results see mapM. mapM_ is just like traverse_, but specialised to monadic actions.
An associative operation NOTE: This method is redundant and has the default implementation mappend = (<>) since base-4.11.0.0. Should it be implemented manually, since mappend is a synonym for (<>), it is expected that the two functions are defined the same way. In a future GHC release mappend will be removed from Monoid.
Map a config modification function over a property.
Map between TreeT computations.
Map a function over all the elements of a container and concatenate the resulting lists.

Examples

Basic usage:
>>> concatMap (take 3) [[1..], [10..], [100..], [1000..]]
[1,2,3,10,11,12,100,101,102,1000,1001,1002]
>>> concatMap (take 3) (Just [1..])
[1,2,3]
fmap is used to apply a function of type (a -> b) to a value of type f a, where f is a functor, to produce a value of type f b. Note that for any type constructor with more than one parameter (e.g., Either), only the last type parameter can be modified with fmap (e.g., b in `Either a b`). Some type constructors with two parameters or more have a Bifunctor instance that allows both the last and the penultimate parameters to be mapped over.

Examples

Convert from a Maybe Int to a Maybe String using show:
>>> fmap show Nothing
Nothing

>>> fmap show (Just 3)
Just "3"
Convert from an Either Int Int to an Either Int String using show:
>>> fmap show (Left 17)
Left 17

>>> fmap show (Right 17)
Right "17"
Double each element of a list:
>>> fmap (*2) [1,2,3]
[2,4,6]
Apply even to the second element of a pair:
>>> fmap even (2,2)
(2,True)
It may seem surprising that the function is only applied to the last element of the tuple compared to the list example above which applies it to every element in the list. To understand, remember that tuples are type constructors with multiple type parameters: a tuple of 3 elements (a,b,c) can also be written (,,) a b c and its Functor instance is defined for Functor ((,,) a b) (i.e., only the third parameter is free to be mapped over with fmap). It explains why fmap can be used with tuples containing values of different types as in the following example:
>>> fmap even ("hello", 1.0, 4)
("hello",1.0,True)
Map each element of the structure into a monoid, and combine the results with (<>). This fold is right-associative and lazy in the accumulator. For strict left-associative folds consider foldMap' instead.

Examples

Basic usage:
>>> foldMap Sum [1, 3, 5]
Sum {getSum = 9}
>>> foldMap Product [1, 3, 5]
Product {getProduct = 15}
>>> foldMap (replicate 3) [1, 2, 3]
[1,1,1,2,2,2,3,3,3]
When a Monoid's (<>) is lazy in its second argument, foldMap can return a result even from an unbounded structure. For example, lazy accumulation enables Data.ByteString.Builder to efficiently serialise large data structures and produce the output incrementally:
>>> import qualified Data.ByteString.Lazy as L

>>> import qualified Data.ByteString.Builder as B

>>> let bld :: Int -> B.Builder; bld i = B.intDec i <> B.word8 0x20

>>> let lbs = B.toLazyByteString $ foldMap bld [0..]

>>> L.take 64 lbs
"0 1 2 3 4 5 6 7 8 9 10 11 12 13 14 15 16 17 18 19 20 21 22 23 24"