* Imperative list operations
@ 1999-09-14 19:36 Steve Stevenson
1999-09-15 12:35 ` Jerome Vouillon
` (3 more replies)
0 siblings, 4 replies; 7+ messages in thread
From: Steve Stevenson @ 1999-09-14 19:36 UTC (permalink / raw)
To: caml-list
[Sorry, English only.]
Good afternoon.
I need a double-ended queue implementation. The lists
can get very long, so I would like to use imperative operations to
change the links.
I've tried all the naïve type declarations --- all of which
don't seem to work. I've tried the age old tricks. What am I not
understanding? or doing right? I'm not fussy: tuples, records or
objects are fine.
Best regards,
steve
-----
Steve (really "D. E.") Stevenson Assoc Prof
Department of Computer Science, Clemson, (864)656-5880.mabell
Support V&V mailing list: ivandv@cs.clemson.edu
^ permalink raw reply [flat|nested] 7+ messages in thread
* Re: Imperative list operations
1999-09-14 19:36 Imperative list operations Steve Stevenson
@ 1999-09-15 12:35 ` Jerome Vouillon
1999-09-15 13:09 ` Steve Stevenson
1999-09-15 13:33 ` John Prevost
` (2 subsequent siblings)
3 siblings, 1 reply; 7+ messages in thread
From: Jerome Vouillon @ 1999-09-15 12:35 UTC (permalink / raw)
To: Steve Stevenson, caml-list
On Tue, Sep 14, 1999 at 03:36:18PM -0400, Steve Stevenson wrote:
> I need a double-ended queue implementation. The lists
> can get very long, so I would like to use imperative operations to
> change the links.
There are some very nice and quite efficient purely functional
implementations of double-ended queues. I suggest you to have a look
at Chris Okasaki's work on http://www.cs.columbia.edu/~cdo/papers.html
(in particular, "Simple Confluently Persistent Catenable Lists",
"Catenable Double-Ended Queues" and "Simple and Efficient Purely
Functional Queues and Deques").
> I've tried all the naïve type declarations --- all of which
> don't seem to work. I've tried the age old tricks. What am I not
> understanding? or doing right?
It is hard to guess without knowing what you have done...
You can use the following type definition :
type 'a node =
{ mutable prev : 'a list; mutable next : 'a list; value : 'a }
and 'a list = 'a node option;;
type 'a dequeue = { mutable head : 'a list; mutable tail : 'a list}
A double-ended queue has a pointer to the head of the list and a
pointer to its tail. A list can either be empty (None) or contain a
sequence of nodes. A node holds a pointer to the nodes that precedes
it and a pointer to the nodes that follows it.
Ther is some space overhead in using option types. So, you could also
use a circular list. The type definition would be :
type 'a node =
{ mutable prev : 'a node; mutable next : 'a node; val : 'a }
type 'a dequeue = 'a node option ref
A double-ended queue is either empty (None) or point to the head of
the circular list. Each node has a pointer to the previous node and
the next node in the circular list.
Insertion and removal looks something like that :
let insert_front d v =
match !d with
None ->
let rec node = { prev = node; next = node; value = v } in
d := Some node
| Some n' ->
let n = { prev = n'.prev; next = n'; value = v } in
n'.prev.next <- n; n'.prev <- n;
d := Some n;;
let remove_front d =
match !d with
None ->
raise Not_found
| Some n when n.next == n ->
d := None;
n.value
| Some n ->
n.next.prev <- n.prev; n.prev.next <- n.next;
d := Some n.next;
n.value;;
Regards,
-- Jérôme
^ permalink raw reply [flat|nested] 7+ messages in thread
* Re: Imperative list operations
1999-09-14 19:36 Imperative list operations Steve Stevenson
1999-09-15 12:35 ` Jerome Vouillon
@ 1999-09-15 13:33 ` John Prevost
1999-09-15 14:35 ` Stefan Monnier
1999-09-16 14:06 ` Christophe Raffalli
3 siblings, 0 replies; 7+ messages in thread
From: John Prevost @ 1999-09-15 13:33 UTC (permalink / raw)
To: Steve Stevenson; +Cc: caml-list
Steve Stevenson <steve@cs.clemson.edu> writes:
> I need a double-ended queue implementation. {...imperative...}
> I've tried all the naïve type declarations --- all of which
> don't seem to work. I've tried the age old tricks. What am I not
> understanding? or doing right? I'm not fussy: tuples, records or
> objects are fine.
It'd help to know what you've tried. The following work for me:
type 'a dlist_node =
| Nil
| Node of 'a dlist_node ref * 'a * 'a dlist_node ref
Or better:
type 'a dlist_node =
{ mutable dlist_prev : 'a dlist_node option;
dlist_val : 'a;
mutable dlist_next : 'a dlist_node option }
Note that in the first case, you need to use value constructors, since:
type 'a dlist_node = 'a dlist_node option ref * 'a * 'a dlist_node option ref
is recursive, and O'Caml doesn't allow type aliases (as opposed to
union types or record types, which "create" new types) to be
recursive.
John.
^ permalink raw reply [flat|nested] 7+ messages in thread
* Re: Imperative list operations
1999-09-14 19:36 Imperative list operations Steve Stevenson
1999-09-15 12:35 ` Jerome Vouillon
1999-09-15 13:33 ` John Prevost
@ 1999-09-15 14:35 ` Stefan Monnier
1999-09-17 12:45 ` Markus Mottl
1999-09-16 14:06 ` Christophe Raffalli
3 siblings, 1 reply; 7+ messages in thread
From: Stefan Monnier @ 1999-09-15 14:35 UTC (permalink / raw)
To: caml-list
>>>>> "Steve" == Steve Stevenson <steve@cs.clemson.edu> writes:
> I need a double-ended queue implementation. The lists
> can get very long, so I would like to use imperative operations to
> change the links.
Since my O'Caml is very approximate, I'll answer with a non-answer:
have you tried a purely functional (but asymptotically efficient)
deque ? Those don't suffer from the length of the queue.
Chris Okasaki has an interesting set of such purely functional data-structures,
with sample code in SML (and/or Haskell) which should be easy to translate to
O'Caml. Check out, for example http://www.cs.columbia.edu/~cdo/jfp95/
Stefan
^ permalink raw reply [flat|nested] 7+ messages in thread
* Re: Imperative list operations
1999-09-14 19:36 Imperative list operations Steve Stevenson
` (2 preceding siblings ...)
1999-09-15 14:35 ` Stefan Monnier
@ 1999-09-16 14:06 ` Christophe Raffalli
3 siblings, 0 replies; 7+ messages in thread
From: Christophe Raffalli @ 1999-09-16 14:06 UTC (permalink / raw)
To: Steve Stevenson; +Cc: caml-list
Try this:
(************** dlist.mli ***********************)
type 'a dlist
val empty : unit -> 'a dlist
val move_left : 'a dlist -> 'a dlist
val move_right : 'a dlist -> 'a dlist
val get_content : 'a dlist -> 'a
val is_left_end : 'a dlist -> bool
val is_right_end : 'a dlist -> bool
val is_not_end : 'a dlist -> bool
val is_empty : 'a dlist -> bool
val insert_right : 'a -> 'a dlist -> unit
(************** dlist.ml ************************)
type 'a dlist =
| Cell of 'a cell
| End_Left of 'a end_left
| End_Right of 'a end_right
and 'a cell = {
dlist_cell : 'a;
mutable dlist_left : 'a dlist;
mutable dlist_right : 'a dlist
}
and 'a end_left = {
mutable back_right : 'a dlist;
}
and 'a end_right = {
mutable back_left : 'a dlist;
}
let empty () =
let rec l =
End_Left { back_right = End_Right { back_left = l }}
in l
let move_left l =
match l with
| End_Left sr ->
raise (Invalid_argument "move_left")
| End_Right sl ->
sl.back_left
| Cell s ->
s.dlist_left
let move_right l =
match l with
| End_Left sr ->
sr.back_right
| End_Right sl ->
raise (Invalid_argument "move_right")
| Cell s ->
s.dlist_right
let get_content l =
match l with
| End_Left sr ->
raise (Invalid_argument "get_content")
| End_Right sl ->
raise (Invalid_argument "get_content")
| Cell s ->
s.dlist_cell
let is_left_end = function
End_Left _ -> true
| _ -> false
let is_right_end = function
End_Right _ -> true
| _ -> false
let is_not_end = function
Cell _ -> true
| _ -> false
let is_empty = function
End_Left sr -> is_right_end sr.back_right
| End_Right sl -> is_left_end sl.back_left
| _ -> false
let insert_right a l =
let li, lr = match l with
End_Left sr ->
let lr = sr.back_right in
let li = Cell {
dlist_cell = a;
dlist_left = l;
dlist_right = lr;
} in
sr.back_right <- li;
li, lr
| End_Right sl ->
raise (Invalid_argument "insert_left")
| Cell s ->
let lr = s.dlist_right in
let li = Cell {
dlist_cell = a;
dlist_left = l;
dlist_right = lr;
} in
s.dlist_right <- li;
li, lr
in
match lr with
End_Right sl -> sl.back_left <- li
| Cell s -> s.dlist_left <- li
| End_Left sr -> raise (Failure "impossible in insert_left")
let insert_left a l =
let li, ll = match l with
End_Right sl ->
let ll = sl.back_left in
let li = Cell {
dlist_cell = a;
dlist_left = ll;
dlist_right = l;
} in
sl.back_left <- li;
li, ll
| End_Left sr ->
raise (Invalid_argument "insert_right")
| Cell s ->
let ll = s.dlist_left in
let li = Cell {
dlist_cell = a;
dlist_left = ll;
dlist_right = l;
} in
s.dlist_left <- li;
li, ll
in
match ll with
End_Left sr -> sr.back_right <- li
| Cell s -> s.dlist_right <- li
| End_Right sl -> raise (Failure "impossible in insert_left")
(*
test
let x = empty ();;
insert_right 2 x;;
let x' = move_right x;;
insert_right 3 x';;
insert_left 1 x';;
get_content (move_left x');;
get_content (move_right x');;
insert_right 4 x';;
insert_left 0 x';;
get_content (move_left x');;
get_content (move_right x');;
get_content (move_left (move_left x'));;
get_content (move_right (move_right x'));;
*)
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-- links below jump to the message on this page --
1999-09-14 19:36 Imperative list operations Steve Stevenson
1999-09-15 12:35 ` Jerome Vouillon
1999-09-15 13:09 ` Steve Stevenson
1999-09-15 13:33 ` John Prevost
1999-09-15 14:35 ` Stefan Monnier
1999-09-17 12:45 ` Markus Mottl
1999-09-16 14:06 ` Christophe Raffalli
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