From: Philippe Veber <philippe.veber@gmail.com>
To: Edgar Friendly <thelema314@gmail.com>
Cc: "caml-list@inria.fr" <caml-list@inria.fr>
Subject: Re: [Caml-list] Efficient scanning of large strings from files
Date: Wed, 21 Mar 2012 08:21:43 +0100 [thread overview]
Message-ID: <CAOOOohThYfSTGTqvYoKPioxLGnNKaCnR4ow11vwXT4NnXyp-Dw@mail.gmail.com> (raw)
In-Reply-To: <4F673830.4010907@gmail.com>
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2012/3/19 Edgar Friendly <thelema314@gmail.com>
> On 03/19/2012 05:08 AM, Philippe Veber wrote:
>
>> Thanks Edgar and Jérémie, this indeed seems to be the right track. I
>> just hope that a repeated use of input_char is not 10-100X slower than
>> input_line :o).
>> ph.
>>
>> Quite true - instead of giving the matcher just a single byte at a time,
> it is more efficient to give it blocks of data, as long as it can keep its
> state from one block to the next. But its matching internally will be on
> one byte at a time, normally.
Thanks for the confirmation, I now see more clearly what to do.
> I guess with DNA, because of the reduced character set, it'd be possible
> to get each symbol down to 2 bits (if you're really just using ACGT), in
> which case, the matcher could run 4 basepairs at a time, but there's a lot
> of corner issues doing things that way. A lot depends on how much time and
> effort you're willing to spend engineering something.
>
Maybe not that far yet, but this is something we've mentionned for biocaml.
I guess I could take some inspiration from the bitset module in Batteries.
Anyway thanks everybody for your help!
ph.
>
> E.
>
> 2012/3/16 Edgar Friendly <thelema314@gmail.com
>> <mailto:thelema314@gmail.com>>
>>
>>
>> So given a large file and a line number, you want to:
>> 1) extract that line from the file
>> 2) produce an enum of all k-length slices of that line?
>> 3) match each slice against your regexp set to produce a list/enum
>> of substrings that match the regexps?
>> Without reading the whole line into memory at once.
>>
>> I'm with Dimino on the right solution - just use a matcher that that
>> works incrementally, feed it one byte at a time, and have it return
>> a list of match offsets. Then work backwards from these endpoints
>> to figure out which substrings you want.
>>
>> There shouldn't be a reason to use substrings (0,k-1) and (1,k) - it
>> should suffice to use (0,k-1) and (k,2k-1) with an incremental
>> matching routine.
>>
>> E.
>>
>>
>>
>> On Fri, Mar 16, 2012 at 10:48 AM, Philippe Veber
>> <philippe.veber@gmail.com <mailto:philippe.veber@gmail.**com<philippe.veber@gmail.com>>>
>> wrote:
>>
>> Thank you Edgar for your answer (and also Christophe). It seems
>> my question was a bit misleading: actually I target a subset of
>> regexps whose matching is really trivial, so this is no worry
>> for me. I was more interested in how accessing a large line in a
>> file by chunks of fixed length k. For instance how to build a
>> [Substring.t Enum.t] from some line in a file, without building
>> the whole line in memory. This enum would yield the substrings
>> (0,k-1), (1,k), (2,k+1), etc ... without doing too many string
>> copy/concat operations. I think I can do it myself but I'm not
>> too confident regarding good practices on buffered reads of
>> files. Maybe there are some good examples in Batteries?
>>
>> Thanks again,
>> ph.
>>
>>
>>
>>
>>
>
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next prev parent reply other threads:[~2012-03-21 7:22 UTC|newest]
Thread overview: 15+ messages / expand[flat|nested] mbox.gz Atom feed top
2012-03-16 13:03 Philippe Veber
2012-03-16 14:14 ` Edgar Friendly
2012-03-16 14:48 ` Philippe Veber
2012-03-16 17:02 ` Edgar Friendly
2012-03-19 9:08 ` Philippe Veber
2012-03-19 13:44 ` Edgar Friendly
2012-03-21 7:21 ` Philippe Veber [this message]
2012-03-16 17:23 ` Francois????Charles Matthieu????Berenger
2012-03-17 16:53 ` oliver
2012-03-19 9:08 ` Philippe Veber
2012-03-16 14:49 ` Jérémie Dimino
2012-03-18 21:11 ` Török Edwin
2012-03-19 9:11 ` Philippe Veber
2012-03-16 20:11 ` oliver
2012-03-18 23:56 ` oliver
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