Copyright | (c) Daan Leijen 2002 |
---|---|
License | BSD-style |
Maintainer | libraries@haskell.org |
Portability | portable |
Safe Haskell | Trustworthy |
Language | Haskell2010 |
WARNING
This module is considered internal .
The Package Versioning Policy does not apply .
The contents of this module may change in any way whatsoever and without any warning between minor versions of this package.
Authors importing this module are expected to track development closely.
Description
An efficient implementation of sets.
These modules are intended to be imported qualified, to avoid name clashes with Prelude functions, e.g.
import Data.Set (Set) import qualified Data.Set as Set
The implementation of
Set
is based on
size balanced
binary trees (or
trees of
bounded balance
) as described by:
- Stephen Adams, " Efficient sets: a balancing act ", Journal of Functional Programming 3(4):553-562, October 1993, http://www.swiss.ai.mit.edu/~adams/BB/ .
- J. Nievergelt and E.M. Reingold, " Binary search trees of bounded balance ", SIAM journal of computing 2(1), March 1973.
Bounds for
union
,
intersection
, and
difference
are as given
by
- Guy Blelloch, Daniel Ferizovic, and Yihan Sun, " Just Join for Parallel Ordered Sets ", https://arxiv.org/abs/1602.02120v3 .
Note that the implementation is
left-biased
-- the elements of a
first argument are always preferred to the second, for example in
union
or
insert
. Of course, left-biasing can only be observed
when equality is an equivalence relation instead of structural
equality.
Warning
: The size of the set must not exceed
maxBound::Int
. Violation of
this condition is not detected and if the size limit is exceeded, the
behavior of the set is completely undefined.
Since: 0.5.9
Synopsis
- data Set a
- type Size = Int
- (\\) :: Ord a => Set a -> Set a -> Set a
- null :: Set a -> Bool
- size :: Set a -> Int
- member :: Ord a => a -> Set a -> Bool
- notMember :: Ord a => a -> Set a -> Bool
- lookupLT :: Ord a => a -> Set a -> Maybe a
- lookupGT :: Ord a => a -> Set a -> Maybe a
- lookupLE :: Ord a => a -> Set a -> Maybe a
- lookupGE :: Ord a => a -> Set a -> Maybe a
- isSubsetOf :: Ord a => Set a -> Set a -> Bool
- isProperSubsetOf :: Ord a => Set a -> Set a -> Bool
- disjoint :: Ord a => Set a -> Set a -> Bool
- empty :: Set a
- singleton :: a -> Set a
- insert :: Ord a => a -> Set a -> Set a
- delete :: Ord a => a -> Set a -> Set a
- alterF :: ( Ord a, Functor f) => ( Bool -> f Bool ) -> a -> Set a -> f ( Set a)
- powerSet :: Set a -> Set ( Set a)
- union :: Ord a => Set a -> Set a -> Set a
- unions :: ( Foldable f, Ord a) => f ( Set a) -> Set a
- difference :: Ord a => Set a -> Set a -> Set a
- intersection :: Ord a => Set a -> Set a -> Set a
- cartesianProduct :: Set a -> Set b -> Set (a, b)
- disjointUnion :: Set a -> Set b -> Set ( Either a b)
- filter :: (a -> Bool ) -> Set a -> Set a
- takeWhileAntitone :: (a -> Bool ) -> Set a -> Set a
- dropWhileAntitone :: (a -> Bool ) -> Set a -> Set a
- spanAntitone :: (a -> Bool ) -> Set a -> ( Set a, Set a)
- partition :: (a -> Bool ) -> Set a -> ( Set a, Set a)
- split :: Ord a => a -> Set a -> ( Set a, Set a)
- splitMember :: Ord a => a -> Set a -> ( Set a, Bool , Set a)
- splitRoot :: Set a -> [ Set a]
- lookupIndex :: Ord a => a -> Set a -> Maybe Int
- findIndex :: Ord a => a -> Set a -> Int
- elemAt :: Int -> Set a -> a
- deleteAt :: Int -> Set a -> Set a
- take :: Int -> Set a -> Set a
- drop :: Int -> Set a -> Set a
- splitAt :: Int -> Set a -> ( Set a, Set a)
- map :: Ord b => (a -> b) -> Set a -> Set b
- mapMonotonic :: (a -> b) -> Set a -> Set b
- foldr :: (a -> b -> b) -> b -> Set a -> b
- foldl :: (a -> b -> a) -> a -> Set b -> a
- foldr' :: (a -> b -> b) -> b -> Set a -> b
- foldl' :: (a -> b -> a) -> a -> Set b -> a
- fold :: (a -> b -> b) -> b -> Set a -> b
- lookupMin :: Set a -> Maybe a
- lookupMax :: Set a -> Maybe a
- findMin :: Set a -> a
- findMax :: Set a -> a
- deleteMin :: Set a -> Set a
- deleteMax :: Set a -> Set a
- deleteFindMin :: Set a -> (a, Set a)
- deleteFindMax :: Set a -> (a, Set a)
- maxView :: Set a -> Maybe (a, Set a)
- minView :: Set a -> Maybe (a, Set a)
- elems :: Set a -> [a]
- toList :: Set a -> [a]
- fromList :: Ord a => [a] -> Set a
- toAscList :: Set a -> [a]
- toDescList :: Set a -> [a]
- fromAscList :: Eq a => [a] -> Set a
- fromDistinctAscList :: [a] -> Set a
- fromDescList :: Eq a => [a] -> Set a
- fromDistinctDescList :: [a] -> Set a
- showTree :: Show a => Set a -> String
- showTreeWith :: Show a => Bool -> Bool -> Set a -> String
- valid :: Ord a => Set a -> Bool
- bin :: a -> Set a -> Set a -> Set a
- balanced :: Set a -> Bool
- link :: a -> Set a -> Set a -> Set a
- merge :: Set a -> Set a -> Set a
Set type
A set of values
a
.
Instances
Foldable Set Source # |
Folds in order of increasing key. |
Defined in Data.Set.Internal fold :: Monoid m => Set m -> m Source # foldMap :: Monoid m => (a -> m) -> Set a -> m Source # foldMap' :: Monoid m => (a -> m) -> Set a -> m Source # foldr :: (a -> b -> b) -> b -> Set a -> b Source # foldr' :: (a -> b -> b) -> b -> Set a -> b Source # foldl :: (b -> a -> b) -> b -> Set a -> b Source # foldl' :: (b -> a -> b) -> b -> Set a -> b Source # foldr1 :: (a -> a -> a) -> Set a -> a Source # foldl1 :: (a -> a -> a) -> Set a -> a Source # toList :: Set a -> [a] Source # null :: Set a -> Bool Source # length :: Set a -> Int Source # elem :: Eq a => a -> Set a -> Bool Source # maximum :: Ord a => Set a -> a Source # minimum :: Ord a => Set a -> a Source # |
|
Eq1 Set Source # |
Since: 0.5.9 |
Ord1 Set Source # |
Since: 0.5.9 |
Defined in Data.Set.Internal |
|
Show1 Set Source # |
Since: 0.5.9 |
Ord a => IsList ( Set a) Source # |
Since: 0.5.6.2 |
Eq a => Eq ( Set a) Source # | |
( Data a, Ord a) => Data ( Set a) Source # | |
Defined in Data.Set.Internal gfoldl :: ( forall d b. Data d => c (d -> b) -> d -> c b) -> ( forall g. g -> c g) -> Set a -> c ( Set a) Source # gunfold :: ( forall b r. Data b => c (b -> r) -> c r) -> ( forall r. r -> c r) -> Constr -> c ( Set a) Source # toConstr :: Set a -> Constr Source # dataTypeOf :: Set a -> DataType Source # dataCast1 :: Typeable t => ( forall d. Data d => c (t d)) -> Maybe (c ( Set a)) Source # dataCast2 :: Typeable t => ( forall d e. ( Data d, Data e) => c (t d e)) -> Maybe (c ( Set a)) Source # gmapT :: ( forall b. Data b => b -> b) -> Set a -> Set a Source # gmapQl :: (r -> r' -> r) -> r -> ( forall d. Data d => d -> r') -> Set a -> r Source # gmapQr :: forall r r'. (r' -> r -> r) -> r -> ( forall d. Data d => d -> r') -> Set a -> r Source # gmapQ :: ( forall d. Data d => d -> u) -> Set a -> [u] Source # gmapQi :: Int -> ( forall d. Data d => d -> u) -> Set a -> u Source # gmapM :: Monad m => ( forall d. Data d => d -> m d) -> Set a -> m ( Set a) Source # gmapMp :: MonadPlus m => ( forall d. Data d => d -> m d) -> Set a -> m ( Set a) Source # gmapMo :: MonadPlus m => ( forall d. Data d => d -> m d) -> Set a -> m ( Set a) Source # |
|
Ord a => Ord ( Set a) Source # | |
Defined in Data.Set.Internal |
|
( Read a, Ord a) => Read ( Set a) Source # | |
Show a => Show ( Set a) Source # | |
Ord a => Semigroup ( Set a) Source # |
Since: 0.5.7 |
Ord a => Monoid ( Set a) Source # | |
NFData a => NFData ( Set a) Source # | |
Defined in Data.Set.Internal |
|
type Item ( Set a) Source # | |
Defined in Data.Set.Internal |
Operators
(\\) :: Ord a => Set a -> Set a -> Set a infixl 9 Source #
O(m*log(n/m+1)), m <= n
. See
difference
.
Query
lookupLT :: Ord a => a -> Set a -> Maybe a Source #
O(log n) . Find largest element smaller than the given one.
lookupLT 3 (fromList [3, 5]) == Nothing lookupLT 5 (fromList [3, 5]) == Just 3
lookupGT :: Ord a => a -> Set a -> Maybe a Source #
O(log n) . Find smallest element greater than the given one.
lookupGT 4 (fromList [3, 5]) == Just 5 lookupGT 5 (fromList [3, 5]) == Nothing
lookupLE :: Ord a => a -> Set a -> Maybe a Source #
O(log n) . Find largest element smaller or equal to the given one.
lookupLE 2 (fromList [3, 5]) == Nothing lookupLE 4 (fromList [3, 5]) == Just 3 lookupLE 5 (fromList [3, 5]) == Just 5
lookupGE :: Ord a => a -> Set a -> Maybe a Source #
O(log n) . Find smallest element greater or equal to the given one.
lookupGE 3 (fromList [3, 5]) == Just 3 lookupGE 4 (fromList [3, 5]) == Just 5 lookupGE 6 (fromList [3, 5]) == Nothing
isSubsetOf :: Ord a => Set a -> Set a -> Bool Source #
O(m*log(n/m + 1)), m <= n
.
(s1 `isSubsetOf` s2)
indicates whether
s1
is a subset of
s2
.
s1 `isSubsetOf` s2 = all (`member`
s2) s1 s1 `isSubsetOf` s2 = null (s1`difference`
s2) s1 `isSubsetOf` s2 = s1`union`
s2 == s2 s1 `isSubsetOf` s2 = s1`intersection`
s2 == s1
isProperSubsetOf :: Ord a => Set a -> Set a -> Bool Source #
O(m*log(n/m + 1)), m <= n
.
(s1 `isProperSubsetOf` s2)
indicates whether
s1
is a
proper subset of
s2
.
s1 `isProperSubsetOf` s2 = s1 `isSubsetOf`
s2 && s1 /= s2
disjoint :: Ord a => Set a -> Set a -> Bool Source #
O(m*log(n/m + 1)), m <= n . Check whether two sets are disjoint (i.e., their intersection is empty).
disjoint (fromList [2,4,6]) (fromList [1,3]) == True disjoint (fromList [2,4,6,8]) (fromList [2,3,5,7]) == False disjoint (fromList [1,2]) (fromList [1,2,3,4]) == False disjoint (fromList []) (fromList []) == True
xs`disjoint`
ys = null (xs`intersection`
ys)
Since: 0.5.11
Construction
insert :: Ord a => a -> Set a -> Set a Source #
O(log n) . Insert an element in a set. If the set already contains an element equal to the given value, it is replaced with the new value.
alterF :: ( Ord a, Functor f) => ( Bool -> f Bool ) -> a -> Set a -> f ( Set a) Source #
O(log n)
(
can delete or insert
alterF
f x s)
x
in
s
depending on
whether an equal element is found in
s
.
In short:
member
x <$>alterF
f x s = f (member
x s)
Note that unlike
insert
,
alterF
will
not
replace an element equal to
the given value.
Note:
alterF
is a variant of the
at
combinator from
Control.Lens.At
.
Since: 0.6.3.1
powerSet :: Set a -> Set ( Set a) Source #
Calculate the power set of a set: the set of all its subsets.
t`member`
powerSet s == t`isSubsetOf`
s
Example:
powerSet (fromList [1,2,3]) = fromList $ map fromList [[],[1],[1,2],[1,2,3],[1,3],[2],[2,3],[3]]
Since: 0.5.11
Combine
union :: Ord a => Set a -> Set a -> Set a Source #
O(m*log(n/m + 1)), m <= n . The union of two sets, preferring the first set when equal elements are encountered.
difference :: Ord a => Set a -> Set a -> Set a Source #
O(m*log(n/m + 1)), m <= n . Difference of two sets.
Return elements of the first set not existing in the second set.
difference (fromList [5, 3]) (fromList [5, 7]) == singleton 3
intersection :: Ord a => Set a -> Set a -> Set a Source #
O(m*log(n/m + 1)), m <= n . The intersection of two sets. Elements of the result come from the first set, so for example
import qualified Data.Set as S data AB = A | B deriving Show instance Ord AB where compare _ _ = EQ instance Eq AB where _ == _ = True main = print (S.singleton A `S.intersection` S.singleton B, S.singleton B `S.intersection` S.singleton A)
prints
(fromList [A],fromList [B])
.
cartesianProduct :: Set a -> Set b -> Set (a, b) Source #
O(m*n) (conjectured). Calculate the Cartesian product of two sets.
cartesianProduct xs ys = fromList $ liftA2 (,) (toList xs) (toList ys)
Example:
cartesianProduct (fromList [1,2]) (fromList ['a','b']) = fromList [(1,'a'), (1,'b'), (2,'a'), (2,'b')]
Since: 0.5.11
disjointUnion :: Set a -> Set b -> Set ( Either a b) Source #
Calculate the disjoint union of two sets.
disjointUnion xs ys = map Left xs `union`
map Right ys
Example:
disjointUnion (fromList [1,2]) (fromList ["hi", "bye"]) = fromList [Left 1, Left 2, Right "hi", Right "bye"]
Since: 0.5.11
Filter
filter :: (a -> Bool ) -> Set a -> Set a Source #
O(n) . Filter all elements that satisfy the predicate.
takeWhileAntitone :: (a -> Bool ) -> Set a -> Set a Source #
O(log n)
. Take while a predicate on the elements holds.
The user is responsible for ensuring that for all elements
j
and
k
in the set,
j < k ==> p j >= p k
. See note at
spanAntitone
.
takeWhileAntitone p =fromDistinctAscList
.takeWhile
p .toList
takeWhileAntitone p =filter
p
Since: 0.5.8
dropWhileAntitone :: (a -> Bool ) -> Set a -> Set a Source #
O(log n)
. Drop while a predicate on the elements holds.
The user is responsible for ensuring that for all elements
j
and
k
in the set,
j < k ==> p j >= p k
. See note at
spanAntitone
.
dropWhileAntitone p =fromDistinctAscList
.dropWhile
p .toList
dropWhileAntitone p =filter
(not . p)
Since: 0.5.8
spanAntitone :: (a -> Bool ) -> Set a -> ( Set a, Set a) Source #
O(log n)
. Divide a set at the point where a predicate on the elements stops holding.
The user is responsible for ensuring that for all elements
j
and
k
in the set,
j < k ==> p j >= p k
.
spanAntitone p xs = (takeWhileAntitone
p xs,dropWhileAntitone
p xs) spanAntitone p xs = partition p xs
Note: if
p
is not actually antitone, then
spanAntitone
will split the set
at some
unspecified
point where the predicate switches from holding to not
holding (where the predicate is seen to hold before the first element and to fail
after the last element).
Since: 0.5.8
partition :: (a -> Bool ) -> Set a -> ( Set a, Set a) Source #
O(n)
. Partition the set into two sets, one with all elements that satisfy
the predicate and one with all elements that don't satisfy the predicate.
See also
split
.
split :: Ord a => a -> Set a -> ( Set a, Set a) Source #
O(log n)
. The expression (
) is a pair
split
x set
(set1,set2)
where
set1
comprises the elements of
set
less than
x
and
set2
comprises the elements of
set
greater than
x
.
splitMember :: Ord a => a -> Set a -> ( Set a, Bool , Set a) Source #
O(log n)
. Performs a
split
but also returns whether the pivot
element was found in the original set.
splitRoot :: Set a -> [ Set a] Source #
O(1) . Decompose a set into pieces based on the structure of the underlying tree. This function is useful for consuming a set in parallel.
No guarantee is made as to the sizes of the pieces; an internal, but deterministic process determines this. However, it is guaranteed that the pieces returned will be in ascending order (all elements in the first subset less than all elements in the second, and so on).
Examples:
splitRoot (fromList [1..6]) == [fromList [1,2,3],fromList [4],fromList [5,6]]
splitRoot empty == []
Note that the current implementation does not return more than three subsets, but you should not depend on this behaviour because it can change in the future without notice.
Since: 0.5.4
Indexed
lookupIndex :: Ord a => a -> Set a -> Maybe Int Source #
O(log n)
. Lookup the
index
of an element, which is its zero-based index in
the sorted sequence of elements. The index is a number from
0
up to, but not
including, the
size
of the set.
isJust (lookupIndex 2 (fromList [5,3])) == False fromJust (lookupIndex 3 (fromList [5,3])) == 0 fromJust (lookupIndex 5 (fromList [5,3])) == 1 isJust (lookupIndex 6 (fromList [5,3])) == False
Since: 0.5.4
findIndex :: Ord a => a -> Set a -> Int Source #
O(log n)
. Return the
index
of an element, which is its zero-based
index in the sorted sequence of elements. The index is a number from
0
up
to, but not including, the
size
of the set. Calls
error
when the element
is not a
member
of the set.
findIndex 2 (fromList [5,3]) Error: element is not in the set findIndex 3 (fromList [5,3]) == 0 findIndex 5 (fromList [5,3]) == 1 findIndex 6 (fromList [5,3]) Error: element is not in the set
Since: 0.5.4
elemAt :: Int -> Set a -> a Source #
O(log n)
. Retrieve an element by its
index
, i.e. by its zero-based
index in the sorted sequence of elements. If the
index
is out of range (less
than zero, greater or equal to
size
of the set),
error
is called.
elemAt 0 (fromList [5,3]) == 3 elemAt 1 (fromList [5,3]) == 5 elemAt 2 (fromList [5,3]) Error: index out of range
Since: 0.5.4
deleteAt :: Int -> Set a -> Set a Source #
O(log n)
. Delete the element at
index
, i.e. by its zero-based index in
the sorted sequence of elements. If the
index
is out of range (less than zero,
greater or equal to
size
of the set),
error
is called.
deleteAt 0 (fromList [5,3]) == singleton 5 deleteAt 1 (fromList [5,3]) == singleton 3 deleteAt 2 (fromList [5,3]) Error: index out of range deleteAt (-1) (fromList [5,3]) Error: index out of range
Since: 0.5.4
take :: Int -> Set a -> Set a Source #
Take a given number of elements in order, beginning with the smallest ones.
take n =fromDistinctAscList
.take
n .toAscList
Since: 0.5.8
drop :: Int -> Set a -> Set a Source #
Drop a given number of elements in order, beginning with the smallest ones.
drop n =fromDistinctAscList
.drop
n .toAscList
Since: 0.5.8
Map
map :: Ord b => (a -> b) -> Set a -> Set b Source #
O(n*log n)
.
is the set obtained by applying
map
f s
f
to each element of
s
.
It's worth noting that the size of the result may be smaller if,
for some
(x,y)
,
x /= y && f x == f y
mapMonotonic :: (a -> b) -> Set a -> Set b Source #
O(n) . The
, but works only when
mapMonotonic
f s ==
map
f s
f
is strictly increasing.
The precondition is not checked.
Semi-formally, we have:
and [x < y ==> f x < f y | x <- ls, y <- ls] ==> mapMonotonic f s == map f s where ls = toList s
Folds
Strict folds
foldr' :: (a -> b -> b) -> b -> Set a -> b Source #
O(n)
. A strict version of
foldr
. Each application of the operator is
evaluated before using the result in the next application. This
function is strict in the starting value.
foldl' :: (a -> b -> a) -> a -> Set b -> a Source #
O(n)
. A strict version of
foldl
. Each application of the operator is
evaluated before using the result in the next application. This
function is strict in the starting value.
Legacy folds
fold :: (a -> b -> b) -> b -> Set a -> b Source #
O(n)
. Fold the elements in the set using the given right-associative
binary operator. This function is an equivalent of
foldr
and is present
for compatibility only.
Please note that fold will be deprecated in the future and removed.
Min/Max
deleteMin :: Set a -> Set a Source #
O(log n) . Delete the minimal element. Returns an empty set if the set is empty.
deleteMax :: Set a -> Set a Source #
O(log n) . Delete the maximal element. Returns an empty set if the set is empty.
deleteFindMin :: Set a -> (a, Set a) Source #
O(log n) . Delete and find the minimal element.
deleteFindMin set = (findMin set, deleteMin set)
deleteFindMax :: Set a -> (a, Set a) Source #
O(log n) . Delete and find the maximal element.
deleteFindMax set = (findMax set, deleteMax set)
maxView :: Set a -> Maybe (a, Set a) Source #
O(log n)
. Retrieves the maximal key of the set, and the set
stripped of that element, or
Nothing
if passed an empty set.
minView :: Set a -> Maybe (a, Set a) Source #
O(log n)
. Retrieves the minimal key of the set, and the set
stripped of that element, or
Nothing
if passed an empty set.
Conversion
List
elems :: Set a -> [a] Source #
O(n)
. An alias of
toAscList
. The elements of a set in ascending order.
Subject to list fusion.
toList :: Set a -> [a] Source #
O(n) . Convert the set to a list of elements. Subject to list fusion.
fromList :: Ord a => [a] -> Set a Source #
O(n*log n) . Create a set from a list of elements.
If the elements are ordered, a linear-time implementation is used,
with the performance equal to
fromDistinctAscList
.
Ordered list
toAscList :: Set a -> [a] Source #
O(n) . Convert the set to an ascending list of elements. Subject to list fusion.
toDescList :: Set a -> [a] Source #
O(n) . Convert the set to a descending list of elements. Subject to list fusion.
fromAscList :: Eq a => [a] -> Set a Source #
O(n) . Build a set from an ascending list in linear time. The precondition (input list is ascending) is not checked.
fromDistinctAscList :: [a] -> Set a Source #
O(n) . Build a set from an ascending list of distinct elements in linear time. The precondition (input list is strictly ascending) is not checked.
fromDescList :: Eq a => [a] -> Set a Source #
O(n) . Build a set from a descending list in linear time. The precondition (input list is descending) is not checked.
Since: 0.5.8
fromDistinctDescList :: [a] -> Set a Source #
O(n) . Build a set from a descending list of distinct elements in linear time. The precondition (input list is strictly descending) is not checked.
Debugging
showTree :: Show a => Set a -> String Source #
O(n) . Show the tree that implements the set. The tree is shown in a compressed, hanging format.
showTreeWith :: Show a => Bool -> Bool -> Set a -> String Source #
O(n)
. The expression (
showTreeWith hang wide map
) shows
the tree that implements the set. If
hang
is
True
, a
hanging
tree is shown otherwise a rotated tree is shown. If
wide
is
True
, an extra wide version is shown.
Set> putStrLn $ showTreeWith True False $ fromDistinctAscList [1..5] 4 +--2 | +--1 | +--3 +--5 Set> putStrLn $ showTreeWith True True $ fromDistinctAscList [1..5] 4 | +--2 | | | +--1 | | | +--3 | +--5 Set> putStrLn $ showTreeWith False True $ fromDistinctAscList [1..5] +--5 | 4 | | +--3 | | +--2 | +--1