In List§

See primary documentation in context for routine classify

multi method classify($test, :$into!, :&as)
multi method classify($test, :&as)
multi        classify($test, +items, :$into!, *%named )
multi        classify($test, +items, *%named )

Transforms a list of values into a hash representing the classification of those values; each hash key represents the classification for one or more of the incoming list values, and the corresponding hash value contains an array of those list values classified into the category of the associated key. $test will be an expression that will produce the hash keys according to which the elements are going to be classified.

Example:

say classify { $_ %% 2 ?? 'even' !! 'odd' }, (1, 7, 6, 3, 2);
# OUTPUT: «{even => [6 2], odd => [1 7 3]}␤»
say ('hello', 1, 22/7, 42, 'world').classify: { .Str.chars };
# OUTPUT: «{1 => [1], 2 => [42], 5 => [hello world], 8 => [3.142857]}␤»

It can also take :as as a named parameter, transforming the value before classifying it:

say <Innie Minnie Moe>.classify( { $_.chars }, :as{ lc $_ });
# OUTPUT: «{3 => [moe], 5 => [innie], 6 => [minnie]}␤»

This code is classifying by number of characters, which is the expression that has been passed as $test parameter, but the :as block lowercases it before doing the transformation. The named parameter :into can also be used to classify into a newly defined variable:

<Innie Minnie Moe>.classify( { $_.chars }, :as{ lc $_ }, :into( my %words{Int} ) );
say %words; # OUTPUT: «{3 => [moe], 5 => [innie], 6 => [minnie]}␤»

We are declaring the scope of %words{Int} on the fly, with keys that are actually integers; it gets created with the result of the classification.

In Any§

See primary documentation in context for routine classify

multi method classify()
multi method classify(Whatever)
multi method classify($test, :$into!, :&as)
multi method classify($test, :&as)
multi        classify($test, +items, :$into!, *%named )
multi        classify($test, +items, *%named )

The first form will always fail. The second form classifies on the identity of the given object, which usually only makes sense in combination with the :&as argument.

The rest include a $test argument, which is a function that will return a scalar for every input; these will be used as keys of a hash whose values will be arrays with the elements that output that key for the test function.

my @years = (2003..2008).map( { Date.new( $_~"-01-01" ) } );
@years.classify( *.is-leap-year , into => my %leap-years );
say %leap-years;
# OUTPUT: «{False => [2003-01-01 2005-01-01 2006-01-01 2007-01-01],
#           True => [2004-01-01 2008-01-01]}␤»

Similarly to .categorize, elements can be normalized by the Callable passed with the :as argument, and it can use the :into named argument to pass a Hash the results will be classified into; in the example above, it's defined on the fly.

From version 6.d, .classify will also work with Junctions.

Support for using Whatever as the test was added in Rakudo compiler version 2023.02.