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Haskell Data Analysis cookbook

You're reading from   Haskell Data Analysis cookbook Explore intuitive data analysis techniques and powerful machine learning methods using over 130 practical recipes

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Product type Paperback
Published in Jun 2014
Publisher
ISBN-13 9781783286331
Length 334 pages
Edition 1st Edition
Languages
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Author (1):
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Nishant Shukla Nishant Shukla
Author Profile Icon Nishant Shukla
Nishant Shukla
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Toc

Table of Contents (14) Chapters Close

Preface 1. The Hunt for Data FREE CHAPTER 2. Integrity and Inspection 3. The Science of Words 4. Data Hashing 5. The Dance with Trees 6. Graph Fundamentals 7. Statistics and Analysis 8. Clustering and Classification 9. Parallel and Concurrent Design 10. Real-time Data 11. Visualizing Data 12. Exporting and Presenting Index

Trimming excess whitespace

The text obtained from sources may unintentionally include beginning or trailing whitespace characters. When parsing such an input, it is often wise to trim the text. For example, when Haskell source code contains trailing whitespace, the GHC compiler ignores it through a process called lexing. The lexer produces a sequence of tokens, effectively ignoring meaningless characters such as excess whitespace.

In this recipe, we will use built-in libraries to make our own trim function.

How to do it...

Create a new file, which we will call Main.hs, and perform the following steps:

  1. Import the isSpace :: Char -> Bool function from the built-in Data.Char package:
    import Data.Char (isSpace)
  2. Write a trim function that removes the beginning and trailing whitespace:
    trim :: String -> String
    trim = f . f
      where f = reverse . dropWhile isSpace
  3. Test it out within main:
    main :: IO ()
    main = putStrLn $ trim " wahoowa! "
  4. Running the code will result in the following trimmed...
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