Array and List
Array
Arrays are our primary ordered data structure. They work the same way as JavaScript arrays.
let myArray = ["hello", "world", "how are you"]
ReScript arrays' items must have the same type, i.e. homogeneous.
Usage
See the Js.Array API.
Access & update an array item like so:
let myArray = ["hello", "world", "how are you"]
let firstItem = myArray[0] // "hello"
myArray[0] = "hey" // now ["hey", "world", "how are you"]
List
ReScript provides a singly linked list too. Lists are:
immutable
fast at prepending items
fast at getting the tail
slow at everything else
let myList = list{1, 2, 3}
Like arrays, lists' items need to be of the same type.
Usage
You'd use list for its resizability, its fast prepend (adding at the head), and its fast split, all of which are immutable and relatively efficient.
Do not use list if you need to randomly access an item or insert at non-head position. Your code would end up obtuse and/or slow.
The standard lib provides a List module.
Immutable Prepend
Use the spread syntax:
let myList = list{1, 2, 3}
let anotherList = list{0, ...myList}
myList
didn't mutate. anotherList
is now list{0, 1, 2, 3}
. This is efficient (constant time, not linear). anotherList
's last 3 elements are shared with myList
!
Note that list{a, ...b, ...c}
is a syntax error. We don't support multiple spread for a list. That'd be an accidental linear operation (O(b)
), since each item of b would be one-by-one added to the head of c
. You can use List.concat
for this, but we highly discourage it.
Updating an arbitrary item in the middle of a list is also discouraged, since its performance and allocation overhead would be linear (O(n)
).
Access
switch
(described in the pattern matching section) is usually used to access list items:
let message =
switch myList {
| list{} => "This list is empty"
| list{a, ...rest} => "The head of the list is the string " ++ Js.Int.toString(a)
}