Sequence ======== Simple sequence abstract datatype, intented to transfer a finite number of elements from one data structure to another. Some transformations on sequences, like `filter`, `map`, `take`, `drop` and `append` can be performed before the sequence is iterated/folded on. Sequence is not designed to be as general-purpose or flexible as, say, Batteries' `Enum.t`. Rather, it aims at providing a very simple and efficient way of iterating on a finite number of values, only allocating (most of the time) one intermediate closure to do so. For instance, iterating on keys, or values, of a `Hashtbl.t`, without creating a list. Build ===== You need OCaml, say OCaml 3.12 or OCaml 4.0. $ make If you have `OUnit` installed, you can build and run tests with $ make tests $ ./run_tests.native If you have `Bench` installed, you can build and run benchmarks with $ make benchs $ ./benchs.native To see how to use the library, check the `examples` directory. `tests.ml` has a few examples of how to convert basic data structures into sequences, and conversely. Examples ======== The module `examples/sexpr.mli` exposes the interface of the S-expression example library. It requires OCaml>=4.0 to compile, because of the GADT structure used in the monadic parser combinators part of `examples/sexpr.ml`. Documentation ============= See [the online API](http://c-cube.github.com/sequence/api/). License ======= Sequence is available under the BSD license.