fix(iter): make pipeline termination conditions consistent (#24614)

If an iterator pipeline stage returns nil as its first return value, the
other return values are ignored and it is treated as if that stage
returned only nil (the semantics of returning nil are different between
different stages). This is consistent with how for loops work in Lua
more generally, where the for loop breaks when the first return value
from the function iterator is nil (see :h for-in for details).
This commit is contained in:
Gregory Anders 2023-08-09 15:41:45 -05:00 committed by GitHub
parent cc4540ebce
commit 2ee8ace217
No known key found for this signature in database
GPG Key ID: 4AEE18F83AFDEB23
3 changed files with 28 additions and 42 deletions

View File

@ -3207,13 +3207,18 @@ receives as input the output values from the prior stage. The values used
in the first stage of the pipeline depend on the type passed to this
function:
• List tables pass only the value of each element
• Non-list (dict) tables pass both the key and value of each element
• List tables (arrays) pass only the value of each element
• Non-list tables (dictionaries) pass both the key and value of each
element
• Function |iterator|s pass all of the values returned by their respective
function
• Tables with a metatable implementing |__call()| are treated as function
iterators
The iterator pipeline terminates when the original table or function
iterator runs out of values (for function iterators, this means that the
first value returned by the function is nil).
Examples: >lua
local it = vim.iter({ 1, 2, 3, 4, 5 })
@ -3225,6 +3230,7 @@ Examples: >lua
it:totable()
-- { 9, 6, 3 }
-- ipairs() is a function iterator which returns both the index (i) and the value (v)
vim.iter(ipairs({ 1, 2, 3, 4, 5 })):map(function(i, v)
if i > 2 then return v end
end):totable()

View File

@ -6,11 +6,14 @@
--- Each pipeline stage receives as input the output values from the prior stage. The values used in
--- the first stage of the pipeline depend on the type passed to this function:
---
--- - List tables pass only the value of each element
--- - Non-list (dict) tables pass both the key and value of each element
--- - List tables (arrays) pass only the value of each element
--- - Non-list tables (dictionaries) pass both the key and value of each element
--- - Function |iterator|s pass all of the values returned by their respective function
--- - Tables with a metatable implementing |__call()| are treated as function iterators
---
--- The iterator pipeline terminates when the original table or function iterator runs out of values
--- (for function iterators, this means that the first value returned by the function is nil).
---
--- Examples:
--- <pre>lua
--- local it = vim.iter({ 1, 2, 3, 4, 5 })
@ -22,6 +25,7 @@
--- it:totable()
--- -- { 9, 6, 3 }
---
--- -- ipairs() is a function iterator which returns both the index (i) and the value (v)
--- vim.iter(ipairs({ 1, 2, 3, 4, 5 })):map(function(i, v)
--- if i > 2 then return v end
--- end):totable()
@ -111,7 +115,7 @@ end
---@return boolean True if the iterator stage should continue, false otherwise
---@return any Function arguments.
local function continue(...)
if select('#', ...) > 0 then
if select(1, ...) ~= nil then
return false, ...
end
return true
@ -127,7 +131,7 @@ end
---@return boolean True if the iterator pipeline should continue, false otherwise
---@return any Return values of f
local function apply(f, ...)
if select('#', ...) > 0 then
if select(1, ...) ~= nil then
return continue(f(...))
end
return false
@ -258,7 +262,7 @@ end
--- in the pipeline as arguments.
function Iter.each(self, f)
local function fn(...)
if select('#', ...) > 0 then
if select(1, ...) ~= nil then
f(...)
return true
end
@ -740,6 +744,12 @@ end
---@param last number
---@return Iter
function Iter.slice(self, first, last) -- luacheck: no unused args
error('slice() requires a list-like table')
return self
end
---@private
function ListIter.slice(self, first, last)
return self:skip(math.max(0, first - 1)):skipback(math.max(0, self._tail - last - 1))
end
@ -912,6 +922,8 @@ function Iter.new(src, ...)
--- Use a closure to handle var args returned from iterator
local function fn(...)
-- Per the Lua 5.1 reference manual, an iterator is complete when the first returned value is
-- nil (even if there are other, non-nil return values). See |for-in|.
if select(1, ...) ~= nil then
var = select(1, ...)
return ...

View File

@ -154,6 +154,9 @@ describe('vim.iter', function()
eq({1, 2}, vim.iter(t):slice(1, 2):totable())
eq({10}, vim.iter(t):slice(10, 10):totable())
eq({8, 9, 10}, vim.iter(t):slice(8, 11):totable())
local it = vim.iter(vim.gsplit('a|b|c|d', '|'))
matches('slice%(%) requires a list%-like table', pcall_err(it.slice, it, 1, 3))
end)
it('nth()', function()
@ -396,39 +399,4 @@ describe('vim.iter', function()
{ item_3 = 'test' },
}, output)
end)
it('handles nil values', function()
local t = {1, 2, 3, 4, 5}
do
local it = vim.iter(t):enumerate():map(function(i, v)
if i % 2 == 0 then
return nil, v*v
end
return v, nil
end)
eq({
{ [1] = 1 },
{ [2] = 4 },
{ [1] = 3 },
{ [2] = 16 },
{ [1] = 5 },
}, it:totable())
end
do
local it = vim.iter(ipairs(t)):map(function(i, v)
if i % 2 == 0 then
return nil, v*v
end
return v, nil
end)
eq({
{ [1] = 1 },
{ [2] = 4 },
{ [1] = 3 },
{ [2] = 16 },
{ [1] = 5 },
}, it:totable())
end
end)
end)