doc: migrate lib.fixedPoints to doc-comment format

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Johannes Kirschbauer 2024-05-17 10:13:13 +02:00
parent cab94ab46e
commit 064f4c55c0
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@ -1,6 +1,6 @@
{ lib, ... }:
rec {
/*
/**
`fix f` computes the fixed point of the given function `f`. In other words, the return value is `x` in `x = f x`.
`f` must be a lazy function.
@ -63,27 +63,52 @@ rec {
See [`extends`](#function-library-lib.fixedPoints.extends) for an example use case.
There `self` is also often called `final`.
Type: fix :: (a -> a) -> a
Example:
fix (self: { foo = "foo"; bar = "bar"; foobar = self.foo + self.bar; })
=> { bar = "bar"; foo = "foo"; foobar = "foobar"; }
# Inputs
fix (self: [ 1 2 (elemAt self 0 + elemAt self 1) ])
=> [ 1 2 3 ]
`f`
: 1\. Function argument
# Type
```
fix :: (a -> a) -> a
```
# Examples
:::{.example}
## `lib.fixedPoints.fix` usage example
```nix
fix (self: { foo = "foo"; bar = "bar"; foobar = self.foo + self.bar; })
=> { bar = "bar"; foo = "foo"; foobar = "foobar"; }
fix (self: [ 1 2 (elemAt self 0 + elemAt self 1) ])
=> [ 1 2 3 ]
```
:::
*/
fix = f: let x = f x; in x;
/*
/**
A variant of `fix` that records the original recursive attribute set in the
result, in an attribute named `__unfix__`.
This is useful in combination with the `extends` function to
implement deep overriding.
# Inputs
`f`
: 1\. Function argument
*/
fix' = f: let x = f x // { __unfix__ = f; }; in x;
/*
/**
Return the fixpoint that `f` converges to when called iteratively, starting
with the input `x`.
@ -92,7 +117,22 @@ rec {
0
```
Type: (a -> a) -> a -> a
# Inputs
`f`
: 1\. Function argument
`x`
: 2\. Function argument
# Type
```
(a -> a) -> a -> a
```
*/
converge = f: x:
let
@ -102,7 +142,7 @@ rec {
then x
else converge f x';
/*
/**
Extend a function using an overlay.
Overlays allow modifying and extending fixed-point functions, specifically ones returning attribute sets.
@ -217,32 +257,50 @@ rec {
```
:::
Type:
extends :: (Attrs -> Attrs -> Attrs) # The overlay to apply to the fixed-point function
-> (Attrs -> Attrs) # A fixed-point function
-> (Attrs -> Attrs) # The resulting fixed-point function
Example:
f = final: { a = 1; b = final.a + 2; }
# Inputs
fix f
=> { a = 1; b = 3; }
`overlay`
fix (extends (final: prev: { a = prev.a + 10; }) f)
=> { a = 11; b = 13; }
: The overlay to apply to the fixed-point function
fix (extends (final: prev: { b = final.a + 5; }) f)
=> { a = 1; b = 6; }
`f`
fix (extends (final: prev: { c = final.a + final.b; }) f)
=> { a = 1; b = 3; c = 4; }
: The fixed-point function
# Type
```
extends :: (Attrs -> Attrs -> Attrs) # The overlay to apply to the fixed-point function
-> (Attrs -> Attrs) # A fixed-point function
-> (Attrs -> Attrs) # The resulting fixed-point function
```
# Examples
:::{.example}
## `lib.fixedPoints.extends` usage example
```nix
f = final: { a = 1; b = final.a + 2; }
fix f
=> { a = 1; b = 3; }
fix (extends (final: prev: { a = prev.a + 10; }) f)
=> { a = 11; b = 13; }
fix (extends (final: prev: { b = final.a + 5; }) f)
=> { a = 1; b = 6; }
fix (extends (final: prev: { c = final.a + final.b; }) f)
=> { a = 1; b = 3; c = 4; }
```
:::
*/
extends =
# The overlay to apply to the fixed-point function
overlay:
# The fixed-point function
f:
# Wrap with parenthesis to prevent nixdoc from rendering the `final` argument in the documentation
# The result should be thought of as a function, the argument of that function is not an argument to `extends` itself
(
final:
@ -252,10 +310,29 @@ rec {
prev // overlay final prev
);
/*
/**
Compose two extending functions of the type expected by 'extends'
into one where changes made in the first are available in the
'super' of the second
# Inputs
`f`
: 1\. Function argument
`g`
: 2\. Function argument
`final`
: 3\. Function argument
`prev`
: 4\. Function argument
*/
composeExtensions =
f: g: final: prev:
@ -263,7 +340,7 @@ rec {
prev' = prev // fApplied;
in fApplied // g final prev';
/*
/**
Compose several extending functions of the type expected by 'extends' into
one where changes made in preceding functions are made available to
subsequent ones.
@ -276,7 +353,7 @@ rec {
composeManyExtensions =
lib.foldr (x: y: composeExtensions x y) (final: prev: {});
/*
/**
Create an overridable, recursive attribute set. For example:
```
@ -298,9 +375,20 @@ rec {
*/
makeExtensible = makeExtensibleWithCustomName "extend";
/*
/**
Same as `makeExtensible` but the name of the extending attribute is
customized.
# Inputs
`extenderName`
: 1\. Function argument
`rattrs`
: 2\. Function argument
*/
makeExtensibleWithCustomName = extenderName: rattrs:
fix' (self: (rattrs self) // {