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Home/ Questions/Q 500337
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Editorial Team
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Editorial Team
Asked: May 13, 20262026-05-13T06:04:37+00:00 2026-05-13T06:04:37+00:00

I am trying to port this haskell function to F# subs :: [a] ->

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I am trying to port this haskell function to F#

subs        ::  [a] -> [[a]]
subs []     =   [[]]
subs (x:xs) =   ys ++ map (x:) ys
                where 
                   ys = subs xs

example

subs [1,2,3]

returns:

[[],[3],[2],[2,3],[1],[1,3],[1,2],[1,2,3]]

returns all sub sequences of a list, which are given by all possible combination of excluding or including each element

….

I am having issues with the ‘where’ statement, which recursively generates the other list ‘ys’.

I am also not sure I port the predicate ‘(x:)’ correctly to ‘(fun i -> i)’.

This is as much of the F# statement I can figure out.

let rec subs list =
    match list with
        | [] -> [[]]
        | x::xs -> List.map (fun i -> i) xs

Any help or direction would be greatly appreciated.

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  1. Editorial Team
    Editorial Team
    2026-05-13T06:04:37+00:00Added an answer on May 13, 2026 at 6:04 am

    Here’s the F#:

    let rec subs list =    
        match list with        
        | [] -> [[]]        
        | x::xs -> 
            let ys = subs xs
            ys @ List.map (fun t -> x::t) ys
    
    printfn "%A" (subs [1;2;3])
    

    A Haskell where is pretty much just like a let moved to the bottom.

    In F#, @ is the list concatenation operator, and :: is cons.

    There are no operator sections in F#, so I use a lambda (fun).

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