Difference between revisions of "FP Laboratory 4"
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<syntaxhighlight lang="Haskell">minimum' :: [a] -> a -- Is this right?</syntaxhighlight> | <syntaxhighlight lang="Haskell">minimum' :: [a] -> a -- Is this right?</syntaxhighlight> | ||
* Find all integer divisors of a given number. | * Find all integer divisors of a given number. | ||
− | <syntaxhighlight lang="Haskell">divisors :: | + | <syntaxhighlight lang="Haskell">divisors :: Int -> [Int]</syntaxhighlight> |
== Functions working with lists and tuples == | == Functions working with lists and tuples == |
Revision as of 09:43, 14 October 2019
Functions working with lists
Implement following functions:
- Create a function that takes first n elements of the list.
take' :: Int -> [a] -> [a]
- Create a function that takes the remaining list after the first n elements.
drop' :: Int -> [a] -> [a]
- Create a function that find the smallest element in the list. Consider input restrictions.
minimum' :: [a] -> a -- Is this right?
- Find all integer divisors of a given number.
divisors :: Int -> [Int]
Functions working with lists and tuples
Implement following functions:
- Create a function that merge two lists into one list of tuples.
zipThem:: [a] -> [b] -> [(a,b)]
- Create a function that compute Cartesian product of two vectors.
dotProduct :: [a] -> [b] -> [(a,b)]
- Create a function that computes n-th number in the Fibonacci sequence. The function should be use n bigger then 50 and get the result in less then a second).
fibonacci :: Int -> Int
High-order functions
- Create a function that takes a string and converts all characters to upper case letters.
allToUpper :: String -> String
- Implement the
quicksort
algorithm. As a pivot use always the first element in the list. For dividing the list, use the functionfilter
.
quicksort :: (Ord a) => [a] -> [a]
*Main> filter (<5) [1..10]
[1,2,3,4]