Question

First, I assume each structure-specific sequences would have different ways to remove an item: Vectors could be by index, List could be remove first or last, Set should be passing of the actual item to remove, etc.

Second, I assume there are some methods for removal that are structure agnostic; they work on seq interface.

Since sequences are immutable in Clojure, I suspect what you're actually doing is making a cheap copy of the original, only without the original item. This means list comprehension could be used for removal, but I suspect it would be unnecessarily verbose.

Please give some idiomatic examples of the different ways to remove items from Clojure sequences.

Was it helpful?

Solution

There is no single interface for removing things from all of Clojure's data structure types, possibly because of the different performance characteristics.

(disj #{:foo :bar} :foo)       ; => #{:bar}
(dissoc {:foo 1 :bar 2} :foo)  ; => {:bar 2}
(pop [:bar :foo])              ; => [:bar]
(pop (list :foo :bar))         ; => (:bar)

These also work (returning a seq):

(remove #{:foo} #{:foo :bar})      ; => (:bar)
(remove #{:foo} [:foo :bar])       ; => (:bar)
(remove #{:foo} (list :foo :bar))  ; => (:bar)

This doesn't work for hash-maps because when you iterate over a map, you get key/value pairs. But this works:

(remove (fn [[k v]] (#{:foo} k)) {:foo 1 :bar 2})  ; => ([:bar 2])

OTHER TIPS

Look at the Clojure reference for sequences. filter and remove are what you seek.

As an extension of Brian Carper's answer. It depends on what you will be doing with the result. If you are passing the result to something that wants to work on the entire set of data (ie to print it) It is idiomatic to make a seq and use filter or remove to solve the problem lazily. If on the other hand you are modifying the data structure to save for various later uses then creating a seq on it would loose its favorable update characteristics so in this case its better to use the update function specific to that data structure.

Licensed under: CC-BY-SA with attribution
Not affiliated with StackOverflow
scroll top