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// Copyright 2021 The Go Authors. All rights reserved.
// Use of this source code is governed by a BSD-style
// license that can be found in the LICENSE file.
// Package slices defines various functions useful with slices of any type.
package slices
// Equal reports whether two slices are equal: the same length and all
// elements equal. If the lengths are different, Equal returns false.
// Otherwise, the elements are compared in increasing index order, and the
// comparison stops at the first unequal pair.
// Floating point NaNs are not considered equal.
func Equal[E comparable](s1, s2 []E) bool {
if len(s1) != len(s2) {
return false
}
for i := range s1 {
if s1[i] != s2[i] {
return false
}
}
return true
}
// EqualFunc reports whether two slices are equal using a comparison
// function on each pair of elements. If the lengths are different,
// EqualFunc returns false. Otherwise, the elements are compared in
// increasing index order, and the comparison stops at the first index
// for which eq returns false.
func EqualFunc[E1, E2 any](s1 []E1, s2 []E2, eq func(E1, E2) bool) bool {
if len(s1) != len(s2) {
return false
}
for i, v1 := range s1 {
v2 := s2[i]
if !eq(v1, v2) {
return false
}
}
return true
}
// Index returns the index of the first occurrence of v in s,
// or -1 if not present.
func Index[E comparable](s []E, v E) int {
for i, vs := range s {
if v == vs {
return i
}
}
return -1
}
// IndexFunc returns the first index i satisfying f(s[i]),
// or -1 if none do.
func IndexFunc[E any](s []E, f func(E) bool) int {
for i, v := range s {
if f(v) {
return i
}
}
return -1
}
// Contains reports whether v is present in s.
func Contains[E comparable](s []E, v E) bool {
return Index(s, v) >= 0
}
// ContainsFunc reports whether at least one
// element e of s satisfies f(e).
func ContainsFunc[E any](s []E, f func(E) bool) bool {
return IndexFunc(s, f) >= 0
}
// Insert inserts the values v... into s at index i,
// returning the modified slice.
// The elements at s[i:] are shifted up to make room.
// In the returned slice r, r[i] == v[0],
// and r[i+len(v)] == value originally at r[i].
// Insert panics if i is out of range.
// This function is O(len(s) + len(v)).
func Insert[S ~[]E, E any](s S, i int, v ...E) S {
tot := len(s) + len(v)
if tot <= cap(s) {
s2 := s[:tot]
copy(s2[i+len(v):], s[i:])
copy(s2[i:], v)
return s2
}
s2 := make(S, tot)
copy(s2, s[:i])
copy(s2[i:], v)
copy(s2[i+len(v):], s[i:])
return s2
}
// Delete removes the elements s[i:j] from s, returning the modified slice.
// Delete panics if s[i:j] is not a valid slice of s.
// Delete modifies the contents of the slice s; it does not create a new slice.
// Delete is O(len(s)-j), so if many items must be deleted, it is better to
// make a single call deleting them all together than to delete one at a time.
// Delete might not modify the elements s[len(s)-(j-i):len(s)]. If those
// elements contain pointers you might consider zeroing those elements so that
// objects they reference can be garbage collected.
func Delete[S ~[]E, E any](s S, i, j int) S {
_ = s[i:j] // bounds check
return append(s[:i], s[j:]...)
}
// Replace replaces the elements s[i:j] by the given v, and returns the
// modified slice. Replace panics if s[i:j] is not a valid slice of s.
func Replace[S ~[]E, E any](s S, i, j int, v ...E) S {
_ = s[i:j] // verify that i:j is a valid subslice
tot := len(s[:i]) + len(v) + len(s[j:])
if tot <= cap(s) {
s2 := s[:tot]
copy(s2[i+len(v):], s[j:])
copy(s2[i:], v)
return s2
}
s2 := make(S, tot)
copy(s2, s[:i])
copy(s2[i:], v)
copy(s2[i+len(v):], s[j:])
return s2
}
// Clone returns a copy of the slice.
// The elements are copied using assignment, so this is a shallow clone.
func Clone[S ~[]E, E any](s S) S {
// Preserve nil in case it matters.
if s == nil {
return nil
}
return append(S([]E{}), s...)
}
// Compact replaces consecutive runs of equal elements with a single copy.
// This is like the uniq command found on Unix.
// Compact modifies the contents of the slice s; it does not create a new slice.
// When Compact discards m elements in total, it might not modify the elements
// s[len(s)-m:len(s)]. If those elements contain pointers you might consider
// zeroing those elements so that objects they reference can be garbage collected.
func Compact[S ~[]E, E comparable](s S) S {
if len(s) < 2 {
return s
}
i := 1
last := s[0]
for _, v := range s[1:] {
if v != last {
s[i] = v
i++
last = v
}
}
return s[:i]
}
// CompactFunc is like Compact but uses a comparison function.
func CompactFunc[S ~[]E, E any](s S, eq func(E, E) bool) S {
if len(s) < 2 {
return s
}
i := 1
last := s[0]
for _, v := range s[1:] {
if !eq(v, last) {
s[i] = v
i++
last = v
}
}
return s[:i]
}
// Grow increases the slice's capacity, if necessary, to guarantee space for
// another n elements. After Grow(n), at least n elements can be appended
// to the slice without another allocation. If n is negative or too large to
// allocate the memory, Grow panics.
func Grow[S ~[]E, E any](s S, n int) S {
if n < 0 {
panic("cannot be negative")
}
if n -= cap(s) - len(s); n > 0 {
s = append(s[:cap(s)], make([]E, n)...)[:len(s)]
}
return s
}
// Clip removes unused capacity from the slice, returning s[:len(s):len(s)].
func Clip[S ~[]E, E any](s S) S {
return s[:len(s):len(s)]
}