Haskell-like pattern matching in R

The goal of the pmatch package is to provide structure pattern matching, similar to Haskell and ML, to R programmers. The package provide functionality for defining new types and for matching against the structure of such types.

The idea behind pattern matching is that we define types by how we create them, and we have ways of matching a pattern of constructors against a value to pick the one that matches the value.

The simplest example is a type defined just from constants. For example, we can define the type enum to consist of one of ONE, TWO, or THREE.

enum := ONE | TWO | THREE

Any of these three constants will be created by this command. If you print them, they just give you their names:

ONE
#> ONE
TWO
#> TWO
THREE
#> THREE

The interesting feature is that we can match against these constructor-constants. Using the cases function we can pick a pattern that matches a value.

elements <- list(ONE, TWO, THREE)
for (elm in elements) {
    value <- cases(elm,
                   ONE -> 1,
                   TWO -> 2,
                   THREE -> 3)
    cat("Element", toString(elm), "maps to value", toString(value), "\n")
}
#> Element ONE maps to value 1 
#> Element TWO maps to value 2 
#> Element THREE maps to value 3

The cases function works by matching its first element–which should be a value constructed as a type we have defined with :=–against a list of patterns and what cases should return if a pattern matches. The pattern arguments are on the form pattern -> expression. The value is matched against the patterns in turn and the first pattern that matches will be chosen. The expression to the right of the arrow is then evaluated and the result is returned.

The patterns do not need to be literal constants. You can also use variables. These will be bound to the matching value and the expression that is evaluated will see such variables bound.

elements <- list(ONE, TWO, THREE)
for (elm in elements) {
    value <- cases(elm,
                   ONE -> 1,
                   v -> v)
    cat("Element", toString(elm), "maps to value", toString(value), "\n")
}
#> Element ONE maps to value 1 
#> Element TWO maps to value TWO 
#> Element THREE maps to value THREE

It gets more interesting when we move beyond constants. The := operator also allows you to define function-constructors. These are written simply as you would write a function call, but the variables are interpreted as parameters of the constructor. For example, we could define:

zero_one_two_three := ZERO | ONE(x) | TWO(x,y) | THREE(x,y,z)

The first constructor, ZERO, is just a constant as before, but the other three takes arguments.

ONE(1)
#> ONE(x = 1)
TWO(1,2)
#> TWO(x = 1, y = 2)
THREE(1,2,3)
#> THREE(x = 1, y = 2, z = 3)

When we use cases to match against such patterns, we can bind variables to the values they contain.

f <- function(v) {
    cases(v,
          ZERO         -> 0,
          ONE(x)       -> x,
          TWO(x,y)     -> x + y,
          THREE(x,y,z) -> x + y + z)
}

f(ZERO)
#> [1] 0
f(ONE(1))
#> [1] 1
f(TWO(1,2))
#> [1] 3
f(THREE(1,2,3))
#> [1] 6

You can nest these patterns to match on more complex values

f <- function(v) {
    cases(v,
          ZERO               -> 0,
          ONE(x)             -> x,
          TWO(ONE(x),ONE(y)) -> x + y + 42,
          TWO(x,y)           -> x + y,
          THREE(x,y,z)       -> x + y + z)
}

f(TWO(ONE(10),ONE(-10)))
#> [1] 42

You have to be careful with the order of expressions, though. If we flipped the two TWO patterns, the first one, TWO(x,y) would match first and we would be trying to add together ONE(10) and ONE(-10), which would result in an error since we do not have an addition operator defined on these types.

The cases function can match any pattern since it has a generic algorithm for this. This makes the function slow. Intead of using cases you can create a function that only checks the patterns you provide it at creating time. For this, you use the case_func function.

g <- case_func(
    ZERO               -> 0,
    ONE(x)             -> x,
    TWO(ONE(x),ONE(y)) -> x + y + 42,
    TWO(x,y)           -> x + y,
    THREE(x,y,z)       -> x + y + z
)

microbenchmark::microbenchmark(
    f(TWO(ONE(10),ONE(-10))),
    g(TWO(ONE(10),ONE(-10)))
)
#> Unit: microseconds
#>                       expr     min       lq      mean  median      uq
#>  f(TWO(ONE(10), ONE(-10))) 812.583 864.5305 1413.7400 913.962 987.142
#>  g(TWO(ONE(10), ONE(-10)))   9.386  12.2300  123.1576  16.962  19.426
#>       max neval
#>  43292.57   100
#>  10681.78   100

A variable will match any pattern, so you can use one as a default case. I prefer to use the . variable.

cases(42, 1 -> 1, 13 -> 13, . -> 24)
#> [1] 24

When you define function constructors, you can give the arguments types. You do this by adding : and a type name to the argument. For example, we could define

one_or_two := ONE(x : numeric) | TWO(x : numeric, y : numeric)

We would now get an error if the arguments we provide to the constructors were not numeric:

ONE(1)
#> ONE(x = 1)
ONE("foo")
#> Error in ONE(x = "foo"): The argument x should be of type numeric.

Constructors and pattern matching becomes even more powerful when you start to define recursive data structures. You can, for example, define a binary tree like this:

tree := L(elm : numeric) | T(left : tree, right : tree)

You can then write a very succinct depth first traversal that collects the leaves of such a tree like this:

f <- case_func(
    L(v) -> v, 
    T(left,right) -> c(f(left), f(right))
)
x <- T(T(L(1),L(2)), T(T(L(3),L(4)),L(5)))
f(x)
#> [1] 1 2 3 4 5

Binding local variables

You can also assign to variables in the current namespace using subscripting on the special object bind:

bind[a,b] <- 1:2
a
#> [1] 1
b
#> [1] 2

With the bind object, you can match against patterns, as with the cases function, and matched variables will be added to the namespace where you invoke subscripting on bind:

x
#> T(left = T(left = L(elm = 1), right = L(elm = 2)), right = T(left = T(left = L(elm = 3), right = L(elm = 4)), right = L(elm = 5)))
bind[T(left, right)] <- x
left
#> T(left = L(elm = 1), right = L(elm = 2))
right
#> T(left = T(left = L(elm = 3), right = L(elm = 4)), right = L(elm = 5))

Testing more than one pattern

If you want to test more than one pattern at a time, you can use the .. function:

f <- function(t1,t2) 
    cases(..(t1, t2),
          ..(L(.),L(.)) -> "Both leaves",
          ..(L(.),.)    -> "Left leaf",
          ..(.,L(.))    -> "Right leaf",
          ..(.,.)       -> "None are leaves")

f(L(0), L(2))
#> [1] "Both leaves"
f(L(0), x)
#> [1] "Left leaf"
f(x, L(42))
#> [1] "Right leaf"
f(x, x)
#> [1] "None are leaves"

This will not work with functions created with case_func. Handling an arbitrary number of patterns requires checks are runtime, and case_func creates a function with specialised pattern checking at creation time.

You can easily define data types to get similar behaviour, though:

tuples := ..(first, second) | ...(first, second, third)
f <- case_func(..(.,.) -> 2, ...(.,.,.) -> 3)
f(..(1, 2))
#> [1] 2
f(...(1, 2, 3))
#> [1] 3

Function transformations

Since this package provides its functionality through a DSL, you can get into trouble when other parts of R tries to make sense of it.

Consider this function:

is_leaf <- function(tree) {
    cases(tree,
          L(x) -> TRUE,
          otherwise -> FALSE)
}
is_leaf(L(1))
#> [1] TRUE
is_leaf(T(L(1),L(2)))
#> [1] FALSE

It works as intended, but if you try to byte-compile it, you get an error:

compiler::cmpfun(is_leaf)
#> Error: bad assignment: 'TRUE <- L(x)'

This is because the byte-compiler tries to make meaning out of the -> TRUE and -> FALSE assignments (it sees them as TRUE <- and FALSE <- because that is what the parser actually returns).

There are two ways around this problem; one is easy and just requires a different syntax in the call to cases, the other is almost as easy, but requires that we transform the function.

First, we can get around the issue using a formula syntax instead of an assignment syntax. Instead of the is_leaf above, we can define

other_is_leaf <- function(tree) {
    cases(tree,
          L(x) ~ TRUE,
          otherwise ~ FALSE)
}

This function, you can byte compile

compiler::cmpfun(other_is_leaf)
#> function(tree) {
#>     cases(tree,
#>           L(x) ~ TRUE,
#>           otherwise ~ FALSE)
#> }
#> <bytecode: 0x7f85dd540840>

The pmatch package makes no distinction betwen the ~ or the -> syntax; you can use them interchangeable.

Alternatively, we can transform the body of functions that calls cases to replace the DSL with if-statements.

is_leaf_tr <- transform_cases_function(is_leaf)
is_leaf_tr
#> function (tree) 
#> {
#>     if (!rlang::is_null(..match_env <- pmatch::test_pattern(tree, 
#>         L(x)))) 
#>         with(..match_env, TRUE)
#>     else if (!rlang::is_null(..match_env <- pmatch::test_pattern(tree, 
#>         otherwise))) 
#>         with(..match_env, FALSE)
#> }

After the transformation, the byte-compiler is happy.

is_leaf_tr_bc <- compiler::cmpfun(is_leaf_tr)
is_leaf_tr_bc(L(1))
#> [1] TRUE
is_leaf_tr_bc(T(L(1),L(2)))
#> [1] FALSE

Transformation has the added benefit of slightly speeding up the function. And, of course, being able to byte-compile can add a bit more to the performance.

microbenchmark::microbenchmark(
    is_leaf(L(1)), is_leaf_tr(L(1)), is_leaf_tr_bc(L(1))
)
#> Unit: microseconds
#>                 expr     min       lq     mean   median      uq      max
#>        is_leaf(L(1)) 264.228 275.4965 314.7998 290.6590 305.721 2134.119
#>     is_leaf_tr(L(1)) 204.092 214.2180 289.6069 224.9885 234.918 3765.645
#>  is_leaf_tr_bc(L(1)) 205.923 212.4610 229.7888 221.8180 237.637  370.995
#>  neval
#>    100
#>    100
#>    100

For more examples, see below.

Installation

You can install the stable version of pmatch from CRAN using

install.packages("pmatch")

You can install the development version pmatch from github with:

# install.packages("devtools")
devtools::install_github("mailund/pmatch")

Examples

To show how the pmatch package can be used, I will use three data structures that I have implemented without pmatch in my book on Functional Data Structures in R: linked lists, plain search trees, and red-black search trees.

To run the examples below, you will need to use the magrittr package for the pipe operator, %>%.

library(magrittr)

Linked lists

The list type in R is allocated to have a certain size when it is created, and changing the size of list objects involve creating a new object and moving all the elements from the old object to the new. This is a linear time operation, so growing lists usually lead to quadratic running times. With linked lists, on the other hand, you can prepend elements in constant time–at the cost of linear time random access.

You can implement a linked list using list objects. You simply construct a list that contains two elements, the head of the linked lists–traditionally called car–and the tail of the list–another linked list, traditionally named cdr. You need a special representation for empty lists, and a natural choice is NULL. With pmatch we will use a constant instead, though, so we can pattern match on empty lists.

We can define a linked list using the pmatch syntax like this:

linked_list := NIL | CONS(car, cdr : linked_list)
lst <- CONS(1, CONS(2, CONS(3, NIL)))

Although R doesn’t implement tail recursion optimization, habit forces me to write tail recursive functions. For list functions, this usually means providing an accumulator parameter. Other than that, recursive functions operating on linked lists should simply match on NIL and CONS patterns. Two examples could be computing the length of a list and reversing a list:

list_length <- case_func(acc = 0,
        NIL -> acc,
        CONS(car, cdr) -> list_length(cdr, acc + 1)
)

list_length(lst)
#> [1] 3

reverse_list <- case_func(acc = NIL,
        NIL -> acc,
        CONS(car, cdr) -> reverse_list(cdr, CONS(car, acc))
)

reverse_list(lst)
#> CONS(car = 3, cdr = CONS(car = 2, cdr = CONS(car = 1, cdr = NIL)))

Translating to and from vectors/list objects is relatively simple. To go from a vector to a linked list, we use NIL and CONS, and to go the other direction we use pattern matching:

vector_to_list <- function(vec) purrr::reduce_right(vec, ~ CONS(.y, .x), .init = NIL)

list_to_vector <- function(lst) {
  n <- list_length(lst)
  v <- vector("list", length = n)
  f <- case_func(i,
          NIL -> NULL,
          CONS(car, cdr) -> {
            v[[i]] <<- car
            f(cdr, i + 1)
            }
  )
  f(lst, 1)
  v %>% unlist
}

lst <- vector_to_list(1:5)
list_length(lst)
#> [1] 5
list_to_vector(lst)
#> [1] 1 2 3 4 5
lst %>% reverse_list %>% list_to_vector
#> [1] 5 4 3 2 1

Search trees

Search trees are binary trees that holds values in all inner nodes and satisfy the invariant that all values in a left subtree are smaller than the value in an inner node, and all values in the right subtree are larger.

We can define a search tree like this:

search_tree := E | T(left : search_tree, value, right : search_tree)

Here, we use an empty tree, E, for leaves. We only store values in inner nodes, created with the constructor T.

tree <- T(T(E,1,E), 3, T(E,4,E))
tree
#> T(left = T(left = E, value = 1, right = E), value = 3, right = T(left = E, value = 4, right = E))

Because of the invariant, we know where values should be found if they are in a tree. We can look at the value in the root of a subtree. If it is larger than the value we are searching for, we need to search to the left. If it is smaller, we need to search to the right. Otherwise, it must be equal to the value. If we reach an empty tree in this search, then we know the value is no the tree.

member <- case_func(x,
        E -> FALSE,
        T(left, val, right) -> {
          if (x < val) member(left, x)
          else if (x > val) member(right, x)
          else TRUE
        }
)
member(tree, 0)
#> [1] FALSE
member(tree, 1)
#> [1] TRUE
member(tree, 2)
#> [1] FALSE
member(tree, 3)
#> [1] TRUE
member(tree, 4)
#> [1] TRUE

Since data in R, in general, are immutable, we cannot update search trees. We can, however, create copies with updated structure, and because R implements “copy-on-write”, this is an efficient way of updating the structure of data we work on. If we insert elements into a search tree, what we will really be doing is to create a new tree that holds all the values the old tree held plus the new values. If the value is already in the old tree we do not add it again, but we will be returning a new tree. We create the new tree in a recursion. Whenever we call recursively, we create a new inner node that will contain one subtree that is an exact copy of one of the subtrees from the old tree–shared with the old tree so no actual copying takes place–and one subtree that is created in the recursive insertion. The recursion goes left or right using the same logic as in the member function. If we find that the element is already in the tree, we terminate the recursion with the tree that contains the value. If we reach an empty tree, the element was not in the old tree, but we have found the place where it should be in the new tree, so we create an inner tree with two empty subtrees and the value.

insert <- case_func(x,
        E -> T(E, x, E),
        T(left, val, right) ->
          if (x < val)
            T(insert(left, x), val, right)
          else if (x > val)
            T(left, val, insert(right, x))
          else
            T(left, x, right)
)

tree <- E
for (i in sample(2:4))
  tree <- insert(tree, i)

for (i in 1:6) {
  cat(i, " : ", member(tree, i), "\n")
}
#> 1  :  FALSE 
#> 2  :  TRUE 
#> 3  :  TRUE 
#> 4  :  TRUE 
#> 5  :  FALSE 
#> 6  :  FALSE

Red-black search trees

The worst-case time usage for both of these functions is proportional to the depth of the tree, and that can be linear in the number of elements stored in the tree. If we keep the tree balanced, though, the time is reduced to logarithmic in the size of the tree. A classical data structure for keeping search trees balanced is so-called red-black search trees. Implementing these using pointer or reference manipulation in languages such as C/C++ or Java can be quite challenging, but in a functional language, balancing such trees is a simple matter of transforming trees based on local structure.

Red-black search trees are binary search trees where each tree has a colour associated, either red or black. We can define colours using constant constructors and define a red-black search tree by extending the plain search tree:

colour := R | B
rb_tree := E | T(col : colour, left : rb_tree, value, right : rb_tree)

Except for including the colour in the pattern matching, the member function for this data structure is the same as for the plain search tree.

member <- case_func(x,
        E -> FALSE,
        T(col, left, val, right) -> {
          if (x < val) member(left, x)
          else if (x > val) member(right, x)
          else TRUE
        }
)

tree <- T(R, E, 2, T(B, E, 5, E))
for (i in 1:6) {
  cat(i, " : ", member(tree, i), "\n")
}
#> 1  :  FALSE 
#> 2  :  TRUE 
#> 3  :  FALSE 
#> 4  :  FALSE 
#> 5  :  TRUE 
#> 6  :  FALSE

Red-black search trees are kept balanced because we enforce these two invariants:

  1. No red node has a red parent.
  2. Every path from the root to a leaf has the same number of black nodes.

If every path from root to a leaf has the same number of black nodes, then the tree is perfectly balanced if we ignored the red nodes. Since no red node has a red parent, the longest path, when red nodes are considered, can be no longer than twice the length of the shortest path.

These invariants can be guaranteed by always inserting new values in red leaves, potentially invalidating the first invariant, and then rebalancing all sub-trees that invalidate this invariant, and at the end setting the root to be black. The rebalancing is done when returning from the recursive insertion calls that otherwise work as insertion in the plain search tree.

insert_rec <- case_func(x,
        E -> T(R, E, x, E),
        T(col, left, val, right) -> {
          if (x < val)
            balance(T(col, insert_rec(left, x), val, right))
          else if (x > val)
            balance(T(col, left, val, insert_rec(right, x)))
          else
            T(col, left, x, right) # already here
        }
)
insert <- function(tree, x) {
  tree <- insert_rec(tree, x)
  tree$col <- B
  tree
}

The transformation rules for the balance function are shown in the figure below:

Every time we see one of the trees around the edges, we must transform it into the tree in the middle. We can implement these transformations as simple as this:

balance <- function(tree) {
  cases(tree,
        T(B,T(R,a,x,T(R,b,y,c)),z,d) -> T(R,T(B,a,x,b),y,T(B,c,z,d)),
        T(B,T(R,T(R,a,x,b),y,c),z,d) -> T(R,T(B,a,x,b),y,T(B,c,z,d)),
        T(B,a,x,T(R,b,y,T(R,c,z,d))) -> T(R,T(B,a,x,b),y,T(B,c,z,d)),
        T(B,a,x,T(R,T(R,b,y,c),z,d)) -> T(R,T(B,a,x,b),y,T(B,c,z,d)),
        otherwise -> tree)
}

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install.packages('pmatch')

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Version

0.1.4

License

GPL-3

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Last Published

October 19th, 2018

Functions in pmatch (0.1.4)