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Index
Half Title Title Page Copyright Table of Contents Preface 1 Getting started
1.1 Values, types, identifiers and declarations 1.2 Simple function declarations 1.3 Anonymous functions. Function expressions 1.4 Recursion 1.5 Pairs 1.6 Types and type checking 1.7 Bindings and environments 1.8 Euclid’s algorithm 1.9 Evaluations with environments 1.10 Free-standing programs Summary Exercises
2 Values, operators, expressions and functions
2.1 Numbers. Truth values. The unit type 2.2 Operator precedence and association 2.3 Characters and strings 2.4 If-then-else expressions 2.5 Overloaded functions and operators 2.6 Type inference 2.7 Functions are first-class citizens 2.8 Closures 2.9 Declaring prefix and infix operators 2.10 Equality and ordering 2.11 Function application operators |> and <| 2.12 Summary of the basic types Summary Exercises
3 Tuples, records and tagged values
3.1 Tuples 3.2 Polymorphism 3.3 Example: Geometric vectors 3.4 Records 3.5 Example: Quadratic equations 3.6 Locally declared identifiers 3.7 Example: Rational numbers. Invariants 3.8 Tagged values. Constructors 3.9 Enumeration types 3.10 Exceptions 3.11 Partial functions. The option type Summary Exercises
4 Lists
4.1 The concept of a list 4.2 Construction and decomposition of lists 4.3 Typical recursions over lists 4.4 Polymorphism 4.5 The value restrictions on polymorphic expressions 4.6 Examples. A model-based approach Summary Exercises
5 Collections: Lists, maps and sets
5.1 Lists 5.2 Finite sets 5.3 Maps Summary Exercises
6 Finite trees
6.1 Chinese boxes 6.2 Symbolic differentiation 6.3 Binary trees. Parameterized types 6.4 Traversal of binary trees. Search trees 6.5 Expression trees 6.6 Trees with a variable number of sub-trees. Mutual recursion 6.7 Electrical circuits Summary Exercises
7 Modules
7.1 Abstractions 7.2 Signature and implementation 7.3 Type augmentation. Operators in modules 7.4 Type extension 7.5 Classes and objects 7.6 Parameterized modules. Type variables in signatures 7.7 Customizing equality, hashing and the string function 7.8 Customizing ordering and indexing 7.9 Example: Piecewise linear plane curves Summary Exercises
8 Imperative features
8.1 Locations 8.2 Operators on locations 8.3 Default values 8.4 Sequential composition 8.5 Mutable record fields 8.6 References 8.7 While loops 8.8 Imperative functions on lists and other collections 8.9 Imperative tree traversal 8.10 Arrays 8.11 Imperative set and map 8.12 Functions on collections. Enumerator functions 8.13 Imperative queue 8.14 Restrictions on polymorphic expressions Summary Exercises
9 Efficiency
9.1 Resource measures 9.2 Memory management 9.3 Two problems 9.4 Solutions using accumulating parameters 9.5 Iterative function declarations 9.6 Tail recursion obtained using continuations Summary Exercises
10 Text processing programs
10.1 Keyword index example: Problem statement 10.2 Capturing data using regular expressions 10.3 Text I/O 10.4 File handling. Save and restore values in files 10.5 Reserving, using and disposing resources 10.6 Culture-dependent information. String orderings 10.7 Conversion to textual form. Date and time 10.8 Keyword index example: The IndexGen program 10.9 Keyword index example: Analysis of a web-source 10.10 Keyword index example: Putting it all together Summary Exercises
11 Sequences
11.1 The sequence concept in F# 11.2 Some operations on sequences 11.3 Delays, recursion and side-effects 11.4 Example: Sieve of Eratosthenes 11.5 Limits of sequences: Newton-Raphson approximations 11.6 Sequence expressions 11.7 Specializations of sequences 11.8 Type providers and databases Summary Exercises
12 Computation expressions
12.1 The agenda when defining your own computations 12.2 Introducing computation expressions using sequence expressions 12.3 The basic functions: For and Yield 12.4 The technical setting when defining your own computations 12.5 Example: Expression evaluation with error handling 12.6 The basic functions: Bind, Return, ReturnFrom and Zero 12.7 Controlling the computations: Delay and Start 12.8 The basic function: Delay 12.9 The fundamental properties of For and Yield, Bind and Return 12.10 Monadic parsers Summary Exercises
13 Asynchronous and parallel computations
13.1 Multi-core processors, cache memories and main memory 13.2 Processes, threads and tasks 13.3 Challenges and pitfalls in concurrency 13.4 Asynchronous computations 13.5 Reactive programs 13.6 Parallel computations Summary Exercises
Appendix A Programs from the keyword example
A.1 Web source files A.2 The IndexGen program A.3 The NextLevelRefs program
Appendix B The TextProcessing library Appendix C The dialogue program from Chapter References Index
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