Bifurcan is an excellent library of high-performance mutable/persistent data structures by Zach Tellman. However, using Bifurcan structures from Clojure involves a bit of type hinting, reifying Java function interfaces, and so on--not much, but just enough to be cumbersome. This library provides idiomatic Clojure wrappers for Bifurcan with an emphasis on performance.
The library is split into several namespaces, one for each major datatype.
Common functions are in core
.
(require '[bifurcan-clj
[core :as b]
[list :as l]
[set :as s]
[map :as m]
[int-map :as im]
[graph :as g]])
Bifurcan lists support efficient adding to the front or end of the list, in-place updates ala vector, concatenation and slicing.
; You can construct a list by hand
(l/list 1 2 3)
#object[io.lacuna.bifurcan.List 0x59e107e4 "[1, 2, 3]"]
; Or turn any iterable into a list:
(l/from (map inc [1 2 3]))
#object[io.lacuna.bifurcan.List 0x7f7fe6e "[2, 3, 4]"]
; You can use datafy to turn Bifurcan structures back into Clojure structures.
(datafy (l/list 1 2 3))
[1 2 3]
; Quickly build up a list using local mutability, then convert it back to an
; immutable structure
(-> (l/list 1 2 3) b/linear (l/add-first :x) (l/add-last :y) b/forked datafy)
[:x 1 2 3 :y]
; You can ask for the nth or size of any collection.
(b/nth (l/list 1 2 3) 1)
2
(b/size (l/list 1 2 3))
3
; Take a slice of the list
(-> (range 100) l/from (l/slice 10 20) datafy)
[10 11 12 13 14 15 16 17 18 19]
Maps support efficient put and get, in-place updates, merge, union, difference, intersection, and so on.
; Maps are constructed with `from`:
(def m (m/from {:x 1 :y 2}))
#object[io.lacuna.bifurcan.Map 0x46c58798 "{:y 2, :x 1}"]
; Read an element
(m/get m :x)
1
(m/get m :z)
nil
(m/get m :z :not-found)
:not-found
; Set an element
(datafy (m/put m :z 3))
{:y 2, :x 1, :z 3}
; put can take an optional merge function to combine with an extant value
(datafy (m/put m :y 3 +))
{:y 5, :x 1}
; You can update a value in place by applying a function
(datafy (m/update m :y + 3))
{:y 5, :x 1}
; Maps support union, intersection, difference, and so on.
(datafy (m/union m (m/from {:y 5 :z 10})))
{:y 5, :x 1, :z 10}
; Maps can also transform keys to integer indices
(m/index-of m :x)
1
com.aphyr.bifurcan-clj.core=> (b/nth m 1)
#object[io.lacuna.bifurcan.Maps$Entry 0x63cac402 ":x = 1"]
Sorted maps also support queries like "which key is just above k?".
(def m (m/sorted-map-from {:a 1, :c 3}))
#object[io.lacuna.bifurcan.SortedMap 0xae6e1f1 "{:a 1, :c 3}"]
; The index of the entry at or just below key :b is 0
(m/floor-index m :b)
0
; Or the entry above :b
(m/ceil m :b)
#object[io.lacuna.bifurcan.Maps$Entry 0x2445704e ":c = 3"]
; These maps can be sliced to just entries between two keys
(datafy (m/slice m :b :d))
{:c 3}
Bifurcan sets work a lot like maps:
(def s (s/from [1 2 1 3]))
#object[io.lacuna.bifurcan.Set 0x4436c461 "{1, 2, 3}"]
(s/contains? s 3)
true
(s/index-of s 2)
1
(datafy (s/difference s (s/from #{3})))
#{1 2}
Bifurcan includes a number of graph algorithms: shortest-path, connected and biconnected components, articulation points, and so on.
; If we were to remove b1, it would partition the graph in two
(-> (g/graph)
(g/link :a1 :b1)
(g/link :a2 :b1)
(g/link :b1 :c1)
(g/link :b1 :c2)
g/articulation-points
datafy)
#{:b1}
See the tests for detailed examples.
If you're using Bifurcan you probably care about performance, so these wrappers are designed to be inliner-friendly and to avoid reflection and manual type checks wherever possible.
Common functions live in com.aphyr.bifurcan-clj.core
. Functions for a
specific datatype (and its associated classes) are in their own namespace:
graphs and vertices live in com.aphyr.bifurcan-clj.graph
, maps and entries in
com.aphyr.bifurcan-clj.map
, and so on.
Coercion between Clojure and Bifurcan datatypes is generally
explicit, rather than implicit. If a function needs a list as an argument, it
generally takes a Bifurcan IList
, rather than also supporting a Clojure seq.
We do this to keep functions small, predictable, and to avoid branching in
potentially hot codepaths.
Coercing Clojure to Bifurcan is done via (e.g. bifurcan.set/from
). This
conversion is shallow. Coercing Bifurcan back to Clojure is generally done via
Clojure's datafy protocol.
There are a few exceptions to this rule. Many functions in Bifurcan use a Java
functional interface like BiPredicate
. In this library you provide a Clojure
function (or map, or set, etc), and we lift it (using
bifurcan-clj.core/functional
) into a wrapper that satisfies BiPredicate
,
Consumer
, etc. We provide currying for a few cases too: you can
(bifurcan.map/update m :k + 3)
to add three to k.
We return nil
instead of Optionals pretty much everywhere. This is generally
unambiguous, and where it might be, there are explicit not-found paths. Clojure
is great with nil, whereas working with Optional can be a bit cumbersome.
Clojure lacks Java's argument type dispatch. Where argument types would be
ambiguous and you might want to control which is used, we generally provide
multiple explicit functions with different names: graph/shortest-path
,
graph/shortest-path-from-any
. In some cases (e.g. constructors) we use
instanceof
checks or protocol polymorphism: list/from
supports iterables,
iterators, and lists.
We generally use Bifurcan's function names rather than their Clojure
equivalents. We use forked
and linear
rather than persistent!
and
transient
. Counting a collection is done with (b/size coll)
, since the
underlying method is (.size coll)
.
There's reasonably complete support for lists, sets, maps, intmaps, and all three kinds of graphs. I haven't done split/merge, Java iteration, diffs, or durable structures.
I'm starting with the parts of the Bifurcan API I use the most often, but every part of Bifurcan should eventually be in scope. If there are structures or functions you're missing, please feel free to open a PR.
Copyright © 2023 Kyle Kingsbury
This program and the accompanying materials are made available under the terms of the Eclipse Public License 2.0 which is available at http://www.eclipse.org/legal/epl-2.0.
This Source Code may also be made available under the following Secondary Licenses when the conditions for such availability set forth in the Eclipse Public License, v. 2.0 are satisfied: GNU General Public License as published by the Free Software Foundation, either version 2 of the License, or (at your option) any later version, with the GNU Classpath Exception which is available at https://www.gnu.org/software/classpath/license.html.
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