difference between foldLeft and reduceLeft in Scala

Few things to mention here, before giving the actual answer:

  • Your question doesn’t have anything to do with left, it’s rather about the difference between reducing and folding
  • The difference is not the implementation at all, just look at the signatures.
  • The question doesn’t have anything to do with Scala in particular, it’s rather about the two concepts of functional programming.

Back to your question:

Here is the signature of foldLeft (could also have been foldRight for the point I’m going to make):

def foldLeft [B] (z: B)(f: (B, A) => B): B

And here is the signature of reduceLeft (again the direction doesn’t matter here)

def reduceLeft [B >: A] (f: (B, A) => B): B

These two look very similar and thus caused the confusion. reduceLeft is a special case of foldLeft (which by the way means that you sometimes can express the same thing by using either of them).

When you call reduceLeft say on a List[Int] it will literally reduce the whole list of integers into a single value, which is going to be of type Int (or a supertype of Int, hence [B >: A]).

When you call foldLeft say on a List[Int] it will fold the whole list (imagine rolling a piece of paper) into a single value, but this value doesn’t have to be even related to Int (hence [B]).

Here is an example:

def listWithSum(numbers: List[Int]) = numbers.foldLeft((List.empty[Int], 0)) {
   (resultingTuple, currentInteger) =>
      (currentInteger :: resultingTuple._1, currentInteger + resultingTuple._2)
}

This method takes a List[Int] and returns a Tuple2[List[Int], Int] or (List[Int], Int). It calculates the sum and returns a tuple with a list of integers and it’s sum. By the way the list is returned backwards, because we used foldLeft instead of foldRight.

Watch One Fold to rule them all for a more in depth explanation.

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