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@bluelibs/ordered-lists

v1.0.0

Published

Performance-focused in-memory append-only ordered lists

Downloads

523

Readme

Append-Only Performance-focused Ordered Lists

The application of these ordered lists (which work with any data type) which are suited when you have event-chains or functional chains that support injecting additional handlers to it in a specific order.

For example, you have an event, and to that event you attach certain handlers with a certain priority. Each event will hold its very own OrderedList of handlers so it knows exactly how to call them.

Install

npm i -S @bluelibs/ordered-lists

Benchmarks

npm run benchmark

The result for 1M records and 1000 orders tested on M1 CPU:

Time elapsed for setting up the list: 28ms
Time elapsed getting sorted elements: 72ms for ordering.

Documentation

The OrderedListCollection is as performant having very little overhead over each individual collection sort.

The OrderedList is append-only and has two main ways of interraction add() and elements():

import { OrderedList, OrderedListCollection } from "@bluelibs/ordered-lists";

const orderedList = new OrderedList<string>();

orderedList.add("Hello", 1);
orderedList.add("world!", 2);

orderedList.elements().join(" "); // Hello world!

Typically orderedList are a sort-of "compile-time" built-up, as you construct your application logic. This means that after the initial configurations, you will no longer "add" to them. The solution is to lock() them so elements() get stored into memory in an ordered fashion and accessing it is instant.

orderedList.lock();
orderedList.elements(); // instantly

You can hook and watch when elements get added:

orderedList.onAdd((element, order) => {
  // Do something
});

The OrderedListCollection is responsible of getting your data from multiple ordered lists:

const orderedList1 = new OrderedList<string>();
const orderedList2 = new OrderedList<string>();

const collection = new OrderedListCollection([orderedList1, orderedList2]);

collection.elements(); // Get all the elements ordered from both lists with their orders properly merged

collection.lock(); // This would store all elements() into memory and will no longer react to changes.