10 unstable releases (4 breaking)
0.5.0 | Oct 4, 2021 |
---|---|
0.4.1 | May 20, 2021 |
0.4.0 | Apr 18, 2021 |
0.3.5 | Feb 27, 2021 |
0.1.1 | Aug 13, 2020 |
#699 in Data structures
137 downloads per month
Used in 2 crates
140KB
3K
SLoC
rb_tree
This crate contains an implementation of the red-black tree data structure and several data structures that are built on top of this implementation. The data structures currently include RBTree, RBMap, and RBQueue.
Data Structures
RBTree
This data structure can be used as a set and has methods to support its use as a set. Methods specific to this data structure include set operations such as union, difference etc. Values are stored in their PartialOrd
ordering.
RBMap
This data structure provides an interface for using the RBTree as a map. Values in the map are ordered by their keys' PartialOrd
ordering.
RBQueue
This data structure allows the use of the underlying red-black tree as a priority queue. A comparison function is provided on instantiation (either with RBQueue::new(Fn(&T, &T) -> std::cmp::Ordering)
or new_c_queue!(Fn(&T, &T) -> i8)
) which is used to order the entries.
Features
The above data structures can be optionally excluded (all are included by default). If you are only using one or two of the types you can exclude the other(s) to help minimise your binary size. However, because RBMap
is a wrapper type for RBTree
including the former will always include the latter. To do this, add to your dependencies:
[dependencies]
rb_tree = { version = "*", default-features = false, features = ["map" | "set" | "queue"]}
This will add to your binary the RBMap
, RBTree
, and RBQueue
types respectively. It is important you set default-features
to false as all features are enabled by default.
Additionally, support for serialisation for the above types can be added with the serde
feature.
See here for more info about cargo's feature system.
Examples
use rb_tree::RBTree;
// uses an rbtree to sort data
fn sort<T: PartialOrd>(to_order: Vec<T>) -> Vec<T> {
let mut tree = RBTree::new();
let mut ordered = Vec::new();
for v in to_order {
tree.insert(v);
}
while let Some(v) = tree.pop() {
ordered.push(v);
}
ordered
}
fn main() {
let eg1 = vec!(3, 6, 1, 2, 0, 4, -1, 5, 10, 11, -13);
assert_eq!(sort(eg1), vec!(-13, -1, 0, 1, 2, 3, 4, 5, 6, 10, 11));
let eg2 = vec!("Is", "this", "the", "real", "life");
assert_eq!(sort(eg2), vec!("Is", "life", "real", "the", "this"))
}
use rb_tree::RBMap;
fn main() {
let mut squares = RBMap::new();
for i in 0..10 {
squares.insert(i, i);
}
squares.values_mut().for_each(|v| *v = (*v as f64).powi(2) as u32);
for i in 0..10 {
assert_eq!(*squares.get(&i).unwrap(), (i as f64).powi(2) as u32);
}
}
#[macro_use(new_c_queue)]
extern crate rb_tree;
use rb_tree::RBQueue;
fn main() {
// use the default comarator
let mut q1 = RBQueue::new(|l: &i64, r| {
l.cmp(r)
});
// compare in the reverse order
let mut q2 = new_c_queue!(|l: &i64, r| (r - l));
q1.insert(1);
q1.insert(2);
q1.insert(3);
q2.insert(1);
q2.insert(2);
q2.insert(3);
assert_eq!(q1.ordered(), [&1, &2, &3]);
assert_eq!(q2.ordered(), [&3, &2, &1]);
}
License
This project is licensed under the terms of the MIT license.
Dependencies
~170KB