1 unstable release
0.1.0 | Jan 12, 2019 |
---|
#2334 in Data structures
62KB
1K
SLoC
index-set
An ordered set that stores indices in a sparse bit field.
Usage
Add the following to Cargo.toml
:
[dependencies]
index-set = "0.1"
License
This project is licensed under the MIT license.
lib.rs
:
An ordered set that stores indices in a sparse bit field.
IndexSet
works similarly to a normal collection, but only stores indices
of its elements. In effect, IndexSet
stores whether or not an element is
part of the set, whilst allowing the actual element itself to be stored
elsewhere; IndexSet
s do not take ownership of their elements, or even a
reference to them, and elements can appear in multiple IndexSet
s at
once.
IndexSet
can also be used as an efficient way of storing integers in an
ordered set.
See the documentation for IndexSet
for more information.
Examples
Basic usage:
use index_set::{IndexSet, ToIndex};
enum Topping {
Anchovies,
Cheese,
Ham,
Pineapple,
}
impl ToIndex for Topping {
type Index = u8;
fn to_index(&self) -> u8 {
match self {
Topping::Anchovies => 0,
Topping::Cheese => 1,
Topping::Ham => 2,
Topping::Pineapple => 3,
}
}
}
let mut pizza = IndexSet::<Topping>::new();
pizza.insert(&Topping::Cheese);
pizza.insert(&Topping::Ham);
pizza.insert(&Topping::Pineapple);
assert_eq!(pizza.contains(&Topping::Pineapple), true);
assert_eq!(pizza.contains(&Topping::Anchovies), false);
Storing integers:
use index_set::IndexSet;
let mut set = IndexSet::<u32>::new();
set.insert(&1000000);
set.insert(&1);
set.insert(&3);
set.insert(&2);
let vec: Vec<u32> = set.into_iter().collect();
assert_eq!(vec, [1, 2, 3, 1000000])
Implementation
Internally, IndexSet
uses a sparse bit field to represent the existence
of indices in the set. The bit field is divided into buckets of 256 bits and
stored in a BTreeMap
.