Computing (FOLDOC) dictionary
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theory A head-strict function will not necessarily evaluate
every
cons cell of its (list) argument, but whenever it does
evaluate a cons cell it will also evaluate the element in the
head of that cell. An example of a head-strict function is
beforeZero :: [Int] -@# [Int]
beforeZero [] = []
beforeZero (0:xs) = []
beforeZero (x:xs) = x : beforeZero xs
which returns a list up to the first zero.
This pattern of evaluation is important because it is common
in functions which operate on a list of inputs.
(1995-05-11)