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Home/ Questions/Q 7398975
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Editorial Team
Asked: May 29, 20262026-05-29T03:56:44+00:00 2026-05-29T03:56:44+00:00

Does Haskell standard library have a function that given a list and a predicate,

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Does Haskell standard library have a function that given a list and a predicate, returns the number of elements satisfying that predicate? Something like with type (a -> Bool) -> [a] -> Int. My hoogle search didn’t return anything interesting. Currently I am using length . filter pred, which I don’t find to be a particularly elegant solution. My use case seems to be common enough to have a better library solution that that. Is that the case or is my premonition wrong?

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  1. Editorial Team
    Editorial Team
    2026-05-29T03:56:45+00:00Added an answer on May 29, 2026 at 3:56 am

    The length . filter p implementation isn’t nearly as bad as you suggest. In particular, it has only constant overhead in memory and speed, so yeah.

    For things that use stream fusion, like the vector package, length . filter p will actually be optimized so as to avoid creating an intermediate vector. Lists, however, use what’s called foldr/build fusion at the moment, which is not quite smart enough to optimize length . filter p without creating linearly large thunks that risk stack overflows.

    For details on stream fusion, see this paper. As I understand it, the reason that stream fusion is not currently used in the main Haskell libraries is that (as described in the paper) about 5% of programs perform dramatically worse when implemented on top of stream-based libraries, while foldr/build optimizations can never (AFAIK) make performance actively worse.

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