You might want to look at the code out there that processes command line options by creating record setting functions, which then are foldl'-ed to create an updated structure. See http://leiffrenzel.de/papers/commandline-options-in-haskell.html at the bottom of the page. I suspect you can easily create a conversion function (of functions) that does what you want.

On Mon, Nov 2, 2009 at 6:38 PM, Evan Laforge <qdunkan@gmail.com> wrote:
On Mon, Nov 2, 2009 at 5:29 PM, Magicloud Magiclouds
<magicloud.magiclouds@gmail.com> wrote:
> Hi,
>  Say I have something like this:
> [ Record { item = "A1", value = "0" }
> , Record { item = "B1", value = "13" }
> , Record { item = "A2", value = "2" }
> , Record { item = "B2", value = "10" } ]
>  How to convert it into:
> [ XXInfo { name = "A", value1 = "0", value2 = "2" }
> , XXInfo { name = "B", value1 = "13", value2 = "10" } ]
>  If XXInfo has a lot of members. And sometimes the original data
> might be not integrity.

This is a function from my library that I use a lot:

-- | Group the unsorted list into @(key x, xs)@ where all @xs@ compare equal
-- after @key@ is applied to them.  List is returned in sorted order.
keyed_group_with :: (Ord b) => (a -> b) -> [a] -> [(b, [a])]
keyed_group_with key = map (\gs -> (key (head gs), gs))
   . groupBy ((==) `on` key) . sortBy (compare `on` key)

-- You can use it thus, Left for errors of course:

to_xx records = map convert (keyed_group_with item records)
 where
 convert (name, [Record _ v1, Record _ v2]]) = Right (XXInfo name v1 v2)
 convert (name, records) = Left (name, records)
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