The following
shift :: [a] -> Int -> [a]
shift l n = drop n l ++ take n l
allRotations :: [a] -> [[a]]
allRotations l = [ shift l i | i <- [0 .. (length l) -1]]
yields
> ghci
Prelude> :l test.hs
[1 of 1] Compiling Main ( test.hs, interpreted )
Ok, modules loaded: Main.
*Main> allRotations [1,2,3,4]
[[1,2,3,4],[2,3,4,1],[3,4,1,2],[4,1,2,3]]
which is as you expect.
I think this is fairly readable, although not particularly efficient (no memoisation of previous shifts occurs).
If you care about efficiency, then
shift :: [a] -> [a]
shift [] = []
shift (x:xs) = xs ++ [x]
allRotations :: [a] -> [[a]]
allRotations l = take (length l) (iterate shift l)
will allow you to reuse the results of previous shifts, and avoid recomputing them.
Note that iterate
returns an infinite list, and due to lazy evaluation, we only ever evaluate it up to length l
into the list.
Note that in the first part, I've extended your shift function to ask how much to shift, and I've then a list comprehension for allRotations
.