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standard-collections

v1.4.4

Published

Standard collections in TypeScript / JavaScript

Downloads

43

Readme

standard-collections

Standard collections in TypeScript / JavaScript

  • Stack
  • Queue
  • Priority Queue
  • BSF/DSF searches

Stack

A stack is a last-in first-out collection. It implements push, pop, peek, isEmpty.

import { Stack } from "standard-collections";

const stack = new Stack<string>();

stack.push("a");
stack.push("b");
stack.push("c");

console.log(stack.pop()); // "c"
console.log(stack.pop()); // "b"
console.log(stack.pop()); // "a"

Queue

A queue is a first-in first-out collection. It implements enqueue, dequeue, peek, isEmpty.

import { Queue } from "standard-collections";

const q = new Queue<number>();

q.enqueue(6);
q.enqueue(1);
q.enqueue(3);

console.log(q.dequeue()); // 6
console.log(q.dequeue()); // 1
console.log(q.dequeue()); // 3

Priority Queue

A priority queue will always extract the priority value that comes first.

Constructor parameters (optional): initial values, custom comparison function.

Supported operations: insert, extract, peek, isEmpty, size, clear.

Example with standard comparison operators:

import { PriorityQueue } from "standard-collections";

const p = new PriorityQueue<number>();

p.insert(10);
p.insert(4);
p.insert(8);

console.log(p.extract()); // 4
console.log(p.extract()); // 8
console.log(p.extract()); // 10

Example with custom comparison:

import { PriorityQueue } from "standard-collections";

interface Bid {
    customer: string;
    price: number;
}

const q = new PriorityQueue<Bid>({
    comparator: (a, b) => b.price - a.price,
});

q.insert({ customer: "john", price: 11.5 });
q.insert({ customer: "elsa", price: 11.7 });
q.insert({ customer: "tom", price: 11.4 });

console.log(q.extract().customer);  // elsa
console.log(q.extract().customer);  // john
console.log(q.extract().customer);  // tom

Graph searches

This library implements depth-first search and breadth-first search.

The graphSearch function returns an Iterable<T> that iterates by navigating on the graph.

Example:

import { graphSearch, GraphSearchMethod } from "standard-collections";

interface City {
    id: number;
    connections: City[];
}

const c1 = { id: 1, connections: [] };
const c2 = { id: 2, connections: [] };
const c3 = { id: 3, connections: [] };
c1.connections.push(c2);
c2.connections.push(c3);
c3.connections.push(c1);
c3.connections.push(c2);

for (const city of graphSearch({
    initialNode: c1,
    getNeighbors: (x) => x.connections,
    method: GraphSearchMethod.DepthFirst
})) {
    console.log(city.id); // prints 1, 2, 3
}