How to convert lazy sequence to non-lazy in Clojure
I tried the following in Clojure, expecting to have the class of a non-lazy sequence returned:
(.getClass (doall (take 3 (repeatedly rand))))
However, this still returns clojure.lang.LazySeq
. My guess is that doall
does evaluate the entire sequence, but returns the original sequence as it's still useful for memoization.
So what is the idiomatic means of creating a non-lazy sequence from a lazy one?
doall
is all you need. Just because the seq
has type LazySeq
doesn't mean it has pending evaluation. Lazy seq
s cache their results, so all you need to do is walk the lazy seq
once (as doall
does) in order to force it all, and thus render it non-lazy. seq
does not force the entire collection to be evaluated.
This is to some degree a question of taxonomy. a lazy sequence is just one type of sequence as is a list, vector or map. So the answer is of course "it depends on what type of non lazy sequence you want to get:
Take your pick from:
- an ex-lazy (fully evaluated) lazy sequence
(doall ... )
- a list for sequential access
(apply list (my-lazy-seq)) OR (into () ...)
- a vector for later random access
(vec (my-lazy-seq))
- a map or a set if you have some special purpose.
You can have whatever type of sequence most suites your needs.
This Rich guy seems to know his clojure and is absolutely right.
Buth I think this code-snippet, using your example, might be a useful complement to this question :
=> (realized? (take 3 (repeatedly rand)))
false
=> (realized? (doall (take 3 (repeatedly rand))))
true
Indeed type has not changed but realization has