jive 0.2.0

Container library with value semantics.


To use this package, run the following command in your project's root directory:

Manual usage
Put the following dependency into your project's dependences section:

jive

Collection library for the D programming language. All types are implemented as structs with value semantics. Here is a minimal example to get you started:

import std.stdio;
import jive.orderedset;

void main()
{
    OrderedSet!int a;
    a.add(3); // add a single element to the set
    a.add([5,1,2,3,1,4]); // add multiple elements at once
    a.remove(2); // remove one element

    // Note that the set is always ordered and that there are no duplicates.
    writefln("%s", a[]); // prints "[1, 3, 4, 5]"

    // all collection behave as value types
    auto b = a; // this does a full copy of the set
    b.add(19);
    assert(19 !in a); // a is not affected by changing b
}

Getting Started

This project uses dub, so you can just put a dependency in your dub.json or dub.sdl and you are done. For an explicit build, use

dub build          # build the library
dub test           # run some unittests
dub build -b ddox  # build the documentation

Features

This library is heavily inspired by the C++ STL, but written in D style. This means that all all collections have associated range-types (instead of iterators) and the naming of methods is different (e.g. .length instead of .size() and pushBack instead of push_back. Most importantly the copy-constructor/post-blit does a full copy of the object in order to achive strict value semantics. This means code like

int sum(Array!int a)
{
   int s = 0;
   foreach(x; a)
      s += x;
   return s;
}

is generally a bad idea beacuse the array is copied when calling the function. Instead you should use

int sum(const ref Array!int a)
{ ... }

or even better

int sum(Range)(Range a)
if(isInputRange!Range && is(ElementType!Stuff == int))
{ ... }

which needs to be called like

Array!int a;
auto s = sum(a[]);

Note that the [] operator on any collection type returns a range which iterates over the elements of the collection.

Collection Types

  • [x] Array (similar to std::vector)
  • [ ] BlockArray (similar to std::deque)
  • [x] BitArray (efficient version of Array!bool)
  • [x] Queue (based on circular buffer)
  • [x] Set (based on hash table)
  • [x] Map (based on hahs table)
  • [x] OrderedSet (based on a red-black tree)
  • [ ] OrderedMap (based on a red-black tree)
  • [x] PriorityQueue (based on a binary heap)
  • [x] PriorityArray (based on a segment tree)

Note that the list does not include MultiSet/Map or LinkedList because I am not familiar with any real usecase, so I am not sure about the interface they should provide. For example there are arguments that linked lists should not provide a .length property, which makes it a very special purpose structure.

If you need these (or any other) structures, please let me know.

TODO:

  • [ ] Compile some nice documentation
  • [ ] Custom predicates for all ordered types (only yet done for PriorityQueue)
  • [ ] Custom allocators using std.experimental.allocator

Dependencies

None.

License

All code in this repository is released into the public domain. Feel free to do anything you like with it.

Authors:
  • Simon Bürger
Dependencies:
none
Versions:
0.2.0 2017-Aug-30
0.1.0 2017-Aug-08
0.0.1 2017-Aug-07
~master 2017-Sep-19
Show all 4 versions
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Short URL:
jive.dub.pm