Erlang lists:index_of function?

You'll have to define it yourself, like this:

index_of(Item, List) -> index_of(Item, List, 1).

index_of(_, [], _)  -> not_found;
index_of(Item, [Item|_], Index) -> Index;
index_of(Item, [_|Tl], Index) -> index_of(Item, Tl, Index+1).

Note however that accesing the Nth element of a list is O(N), so an algorithm that often accesses a list by index will be less efficient than one that iterates through it sequentially.


As others noted, there are more efficient ways to solve for this. But if you're looking for something quick, this worked for me:

string:str(List, [Element]).

Other solutions (remark that these are base-index=1):

index_of(Value, List) ->
   Map = lists:zip(List, lists:seq(1, length(List))),
   case lists:keyfind(Value, 1, Map) of
      {Value, Index} -> Index;
      false -> notfound
   end.

index_of(Value, List) ->
   Map = lists:zip(List, lists:seq(1, length(List))),
   case dict:find(Value, dict:from_list(Map)) of
      {ok, Index} -> Index;
      error -> notfound
   end.

At some point, when the lists you pass to these functions get long enough, the overhead of constructing the additional list or dict becomes too expensive. If you can avoid doing the construction every time you want to search the list by keeping the list in that format outside of these functions, you eliminate most of the overhead.

Using a dictionary will hash the values in the list and help reduce the index lookup time to O(log N), so it's better to use that for large, singly-keyed lists.

In general, it's up to you, the programmer, to organize your data into structures that suit how you're going to use them. My guess is that the absence of a built-in index_of is to encourage such consideration. If you're doing single-key lookups -- that's really what index_of() is -- use a dictionary. If you're doing multi-key lookups, use a list of tuples with lists:keyfind() et al. If your lists are inordinately large, a less simplistic solution is probably best.

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