/hashtable

This provides a hash table data structure that is specialized for handling key/value pairs.

Primary LanguageRubyMIT LicenseMIT

Hashtable

License MIT 

HashTable - This provides a hash table data structure that is specialized for handling key/value pairs. This does some funky memory allocation and hashing things to make it extremely efficient, storing the key/value with SparseBitArray.

SparseBitArray - is an implementation of a bitmap that is sparse by only storing the elements that have non-zero bits set.

Installation

Add this line to your application's Gemfile:

gem 'hashtable'

And then execute:

$ bundle install

Or install it yourself as:

$ gem install hashtable

Usage

SparseBitArray

e = HashTable::SparseBitArrayElement.new
# Set, Test and Reset a bit in the bitmap
e.set(23)
e.test?(17)
e.reset(4000)

# The index of the first set bit
e.first
# The index of the last set bit
e.last


(0..128).to_a.each_index do |i|
    e.set(i)
end
# Enumerator
e.each do |index|
  p "#{index}----"
end

HashTable

Store numbers:

table = HashTable::HashTable.new(2)
table.set(3, 7, HashTable::IdentityHashTraits.new)
table.set(4, 5, HashTable::IdentityHashTraits.new)
table.set(5, 6, HashTable::IdentityHashTraits.new)
table.set(6, 7, HashTable::IdentityHashTraits.new)
table.set(8, 9, HashTable::IdentityHashTraits.new)
table.set(9, 19, HashTable::IdentityHashTraits.new)
expect(table.size).to eq(6)
expect(table.get(3, HashTable::IdentityHashTraits.new)).to eq(7)
expect(table.get(4, HashTable::IdentityHashTraits.new)).to eq(5)
expect(table.get(5, HashTable::IdentityHashTraits.new)).to eq(6)
expect(table.get(6, HashTable::IdentityHashTraits.new)).to eq(7)
expect(table.get(8, HashTable::IdentityHashTraits.new)).to eq(9)
expect(table.get(9, HashTable::IdentityHashTraits.new)).to eq(19)
expect(table.capacity).to eq(16)

Store strings:

table = HashTable::HashTable.new(2)
traits = HashTable::StringIdentityHashTraits.new
table.set('ViewController64.h', 'ViewController64.h', traits)
table.set('ViewController65.h', 'ViewController65.h', traits)
table.set('ViewController66.h', 'ViewController66.h', traits)
table.set('ViewController67.h', 'ViewController67.h', traits)
table.set('ViewController68.h', 'ViewController68.h', traits)
table.set('ViewController69.h', 'ViewController69.h', traits)
expect(table.size).to eq(6)
expect(table.get('ViewController64.h', traits)).to eq('ViewController64.h')
expect(table.get('ViewController65.h', traits)).to eq('ViewController65.h')
expect(table.get('ViewController66.h', traits)).to eq('ViewController66.h')
expect(table.get('ViewController67.h', traits)).to eq('ViewController67.h')
expect(table.get('ViewController68.h', traits)).to eq('ViewController68.h')
expect(table.get('ViewController69.h', traits)).to eq('ViewController69.h')
expect(table.capacity).to eq(16)
expect(traits.string_table).to eq("\u0000ViewController64.h\u0000ViewController65.h\u0000ViewController66.h\u0000ViewController67.h\u0000ViewController68.h\u0000ViewController69.h\u0000")

Store just key string:

table = HashTable::HashTable.new
traits = HashTable::StringIdentityHashTraits.new
(0..31).each do |i|
  table.add("ViewController#{i}.h", traits)
end
p "#{table.size}---#{table.capacity}----#{table.num_entries}"
expect(table.size).to eq(32)
expect(table.capacity).to eq(64)
expect(table.num_entries).to eq(32)

Store strings and expand capacity:

  • num_entries = capacity + 1
  • capacity = capacity * 2
  • capacity is power_of_two
table = HashTable::HashTable.new(1364, expand: true)
traits = HashTable::StringHashTraits.new
buckets = (0..1363).map do |i|
table.set("ViewController#{i}.h",
            ["/Users/ws/Desktop/llvm/TestAndTestApp/TestAndTestApp/Group/h2/#{i}", "ViewController#{i}.h"], traits)
end
p "#{table.size}---#{table.capacity}----#{table.num_entries}"
expect(table.size).to eq(1364)
expect(table.capacity).to eq(8192)
expect(table.num_entries).to eq(4097)

Contributing

Bug reports and pull requests are welcome on GitHub at https://github.com/Cat1237/hashtable. This project is intended to be a safe, welcoming space for collaboration, and contributors are expected to adhere to the code of conduct.

License

The gem is available as open source under the terms of the MIT License.

Code of Conduct

Everyone interacting in the Hashtable project's codebases, issue trackers, chat rooms and mailing lists is expected to follow the code of conduct.