There is some structure to this problem, and here it comes. I'll be using this stuff:
import Control.Applicative
import Data.Traversable
import Data.List
First up, lists-with-padding are a useful concept, so let's have a type for them.
data Padme m = (:-) {padded :: [m], padder :: m} deriving (Show, Eq)
Next, I remember that the truncating-zip
operation gives rise to an Applicative
instance, in the library as newtype ZipList
(a popular example of a non-Monad
). The Applicative ZipList
amounts to a decoration of the monoid given by infinity and minimum. Padme
has a similar structure, except that its underlying monoid is positive numbers (with infinity), using one and maximum.
instance Applicative Padme where
pure = ([] :-)
(fs :- f) <*> (ss :- s) = zapp fs ss :- f s where
zapp [] ss = map f ss
zapp fs [] = map ($ s) fs
zapp (f : fs) (s : ss) = f s : zapp fs ss
I am obliged to utter the usual incantation to generate a default Functor
instance.
instance Functor Padme where fmap = (<*>) . pure
Thus equipped, we can pad away! For example, the function which takes a ragged list of strings and pads them with spaces becomes a one liner.
deggar :: [String] -> [String]
deggar = transpose . padded . traverse (:- ' ')
See?
*Padme> deggar ["om", "mane", "padme", "hum"]
["om ","mane ","padme","hum "]
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