Derek Elkins writes:
On Tue, 2007-07-24 at 17:34 +0100, Eric wrote:
Does anyone know of a good article which discusses snoc vs cons lists?

There's no reason to; there is no difference between a snoc list and a
cons list.

Still, it (snoc) may be considered as a useful exercice in recursion,
patterns, generalization, and whatever. This is not a good answer : "just
no".
Look :
http://trevion.blogspot.com/2006/12/little-knowledge-gets-you-long-way.html
http://citeseer.ist.psu.edu/cache/papers/cs/1482/http:zSzzSzbrahms.fmi.uni-p assau.dezSzclzSzpaperszSzGesGor97b.pdf/geser97parallelizing.pdf http://citeseer.ist.psu.edu/cache/papers/cs/27853/http:zSzzSzwww-2.cs.cmu.ed uzSz~rwhzSzcourseszSzmoduleszSzpaperszSzwadler87zSzpaper.pdf/wadler86views.p df
and some others.
And, anyway, when I was young, my Master used to say:
"If you have nothing to say, then." Jerzy Karczmarczuk

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