A general sequence representation with arbitrary annotations, for use as a base for implementations of various collection types, with examples, as described in section 4 of Ralf Hinze and Ross Paterson, "Finger trees: a simple general-purpose data structure", Journal of Functional Programming 16:2 (2006) pp 197-217. http://staff.city.ac.uk/~ross/papers/FingerTree.html For a tuned sequence type, see Data.Sequence in the containers package, which is a specialization of this structure.
OS | Architecture | Version |
---|---|---|
NetBSD 10.0 | aarch64 | hs-hw-fingertree-0.1.2.1nb4.tgz |
NetBSD 10.0 | aarch64 | hs-hw-fingertree-0.1.2.1nb4.tgz |
NetBSD 10.0 | x86_64 | hs-hw-fingertree-0.1.2.1nb4.tgz |
NetBSD 10.0 | x86_64 | hs-hw-fingertree-0.1.2.1nb4.tgz |
NetBSD 9.0 | aarch64 | hs-hw-fingertree-0.1.2.1nb4.tgz |
NetBSD 9.0 | aarch64 | hs-hw-fingertree-0.1.2.1nb4.tgz |
NetBSD 9.0 | x86_64 | hs-hw-fingertree-0.1.2.1nb4.tgz |
NetBSD 9.0 | x86_64 | hs-hw-fingertree-0.1.2.1nb4.tgz |
NetBSD 9.3 | x86_64 | hs-hw-fingertree-0.1.2.1nb4.tgz |
Binary packages can be installed with the high-level tool pkgin (which can be installed with pkg_add) or pkg_add(1) (installed by default). The NetBSD packages collection is also designed to permit easy installation from source.
The pkg_admin audit command locates any installed package which has been mentioned in security advisories as having vulnerabilities.
Please note the vulnerabilities database might not be fully accurate, and not every bug is exploitable with every configuration.
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