In List§
See primary documentation in context for routine antipairs
method antipairs(List: --> Seq)
Returns a Seq of pairs, with the values as keys and the indexes as values, i.e. the direct opposite to pairs.
say <a b c>.antipairs; # OUTPUT: «(a => 0 b => 1 c => 2)»
In Capture§
See primary documentation in context for method antipairs
multi method antipairs(Capture: --> Seq)
Returns all arguments, the positional followed by the named, as a Seq of pairs where the keys and values have been swapped, i.e. the value becomes the key and the key becomes the value. This behavior is the opposite of the pairs method.
my = \(2, 3, apples => (red => 2));say .antipairs; # OUTPUT: «(2 => 0 3 => 1 (red => 2) => apples)»
In Map§
See primary documentation in context for method antipairs
method antipairs(Map: --> Seq)
Returns all keys and their respective values as a Seq of Pair
s where the keys and values have been exchanged, i.e. the opposite of method pairs. Unlike the invert
method, there is no attempt to expand list values into multiple pairs.
my = Map.new('a' => (2, 3), 'b' => 17);say .antipairs; # OUTPUT: «((2 3) => a 17 => b)»
In role Setty§
See primary documentation in context for method antipairs
multi method antipairs(Setty: --> Seq)
Returns all elements in the set and True
as a Seq of Pairs, where the element itself is the value, i.e. the opposite of method pairs
.
my = Set.new(1, 2, 3, 1);say .antipairs.sort; # OUTPUT: «(True => 1 True => 2 True => 3)»
In Pair§
See primary documentation in context for method antipairs
multi method antipairs(Pair:)
Returns a List containing the antipair of the invocant.
my = (d => 'Raku').antipairs;say .^name; # OUTPUT: «List»say .first; # OUTPUT: «Raku => d»say .first.^name; # OUTPUT: «Pair»
In Any§
See primary documentation in context for method antipairs
multi method antipairs(Any:)multi method antipairs(Any:)
Returns an empty List if the invocant is a type object
Range.antipairs.say; # OUTPUT: «()»
If it's a value object, it returns the inverted list of pairs after converting it to a list of pairs; the values will become keys and the other way round.
%(s => 1, t=> 2, u => 3).antipairs.say ;# OUTPUT: «(2 => t 1 => s 3 => u)»
In role Baggy§
See primary documentation in context for method antipairs
method antipairs(Baggy: --> Seq)
Returns all elements and their respective weights as a Seq of Pairs, where the element itself is the value and the weight of that element is the key, i.e. the opposite of method pairs.
my = bag <bacon eggs bacon>;my = .antipairs;say .sort; # OUTPUT: «(1 => eggs 2 => bacon)»