Files
swift-mirror/stdlib/public/Concurrency/AsyncFlatMapSequence.swift
Karoy Lorentey 47956908b7 [Concurrency] SwiftStdlib 5.5 ⟹ SwiftStdlib 5.1 (usages)
The concurrency runtime now deploys back to macOS 10.15, iOS 13.0, watchOS 6.0, tvOS 13.0, which corresponds to the 5.1 release of the stdlib.

Adjust macro usages accordingly.
2021-10-28 14:36:36 -07:00

157 lines
5.5 KiB
Swift

//===----------------------------------------------------------------------===//
//
// This source file is part of the Swift.org open source project
//
// Copyright (c) 2021 Apple Inc. and the Swift project authors
// Licensed under Apache License v2.0 with Runtime Library Exception
//
// See https://swift.org/LICENSE.txt for license information
// See https://swift.org/CONTRIBUTORS.txt for the list of Swift project authors
//
//===----------------------------------------------------------------------===//
import Swift
@available(SwiftStdlib 5.1, *)
extension AsyncSequence {
/// Creates an asynchronous sequence that concatenates the results of calling
/// the given transformation with each element of this sequence.
///
/// Use this method to receive a single-level asynchronous sequence when your
/// transformation produces an asynchronous sequence for each element.
///
/// In this example, an asynchronous sequence called `Counter` produces `Int`
/// values from `1` to `5`. The transforming closure takes the received `Int`
/// and returns a new `Counter` that counts that high. For example, when the
/// transform receives `3` from the base sequence, it creates a new `Counter`
/// that produces the values `1`, `2`, and `3`. The `flatMap(_:)` method
/// "flattens" the resulting sequence-of-sequences into a single
/// `AsyncSequence`.
///
/// let stream = Counter(howHigh: 5)
/// .flatMap { Counter(howHigh: $0) }
/// for await number in stream {
/// print("\(number)", terminator: " ")
/// }
/// // Prints: 1 1 2 1 2 3 1 2 3 4 1 2 3 4 5
///
/// - Parameter transform: A mapping closure. `transform` accepts an element
/// of this sequence as its parameter and returns an `AsyncSequence`.
/// - Returns: A single, flattened asynchronous sequence that contains all
/// elements in all the asychronous sequences produced by `transform`.
@inlinable
public __consuming func flatMap<SegmentOfResult: AsyncSequence>(
_ transform: @escaping (Element) async -> SegmentOfResult
) -> AsyncFlatMapSequence<Self, SegmentOfResult> {
return AsyncFlatMapSequence(self, transform: transform)
}
}
/// An asynchronous sequence that concatenates the results of calling a given
/// transformation with each element of this sequence.
@available(SwiftStdlib 5.1, *)
public struct AsyncFlatMapSequence<Base: AsyncSequence, SegmentOfResult: AsyncSequence> {
@usableFromInline
let base: Base
@usableFromInline
let transform: (Base.Element) async -> SegmentOfResult
@usableFromInline
init(
_ base: Base,
transform: @escaping (Base.Element) async -> SegmentOfResult
) {
self.base = base
self.transform = transform
}
}
@available(SwiftStdlib 5.1, *)
extension AsyncFlatMapSequence: AsyncSequence {
/// The type of element produced by this asynchronous sequence.
///
/// The flat map sequence produces the type of element in the asynchronous
/// sequence produced by the `transform` closure.
public typealias Element = SegmentOfResult.Element
/// The type of iterator that produces elements of the sequence.
public typealias AsyncIterator = Iterator
/// The iterator that produces elements of the flat map sequence.
public struct Iterator: AsyncIteratorProtocol {
@usableFromInline
var baseIterator: Base.AsyncIterator
@usableFromInline
let transform: (Base.Element) async -> SegmentOfResult
@usableFromInline
var currentIterator: SegmentOfResult.AsyncIterator?
@usableFromInline
var finished = false
@usableFromInline
init(
_ baseIterator: Base.AsyncIterator,
transform: @escaping (Base.Element) async -> SegmentOfResult
) {
self.baseIterator = baseIterator
self.transform = transform
}
/// Produces the next element in the flat map sequence.
///
/// This iterator calls `next()` on its base iterator; if this call returns
/// `nil`, `next()` returns `nil`. Otherwise, `next()` calls the
/// transforming closure on the received element, takes the resulting
/// asynchronous sequence, and creates an asynchronous iterator from it.
/// `next()` then consumes values from this iterator until it terminates.
/// At this point, `next()` is ready to receive the next value from the base
/// sequence.
@inlinable
public mutating func next() async rethrows -> SegmentOfResult.Element? {
while !finished {
if var iterator = currentIterator {
do {
guard let element = try await iterator.next() else {
currentIterator = nil
continue
}
// restore the iterator since we just mutated it with next
currentIterator = iterator
return element
} catch {
finished = true
throw error
}
} else {
guard let item = try await baseIterator.next() else {
finished = true
return nil
}
do {
let segment = await transform(item)
var iterator = segment.makeAsyncIterator()
guard let element = try await iterator.next() else {
currentIterator = nil
continue
}
currentIterator = iterator
return element
} catch {
finished = true
throw error
}
}
}
return nil
}
}
@inlinable
public __consuming func makeAsyncIterator() -> Iterator {
return Iterator(base.makeAsyncIterator(), transform: transform)
}
}