Package Exports
- typescript-collections
- typescript-collections/dist/lib/Dictionary
- typescript-collections/dist/lib/LinkedList
- typescript-collections/dist/lib/PriorityQueue
- typescript-collections/dist/lib/Queue
- typescript-collections/dist/lib/Stack
- typescript-collections/dist/lib/util
This package does not declare an exports field, so the exports above have been automatically detected and optimized by JSPM instead. If any package subpath is missing, it is recommended to post an issue to the original package (typescript-collections) to support the "exports" field. If that is not possible, create a JSPM override to customize the exports field for this package.
Readme
TypeScript Collections
It is a complete, fully tested data structure library written in TypeScript.
This project uses TypeScript Generics so you need TS 0.9 and above.
This projects supports UMD (Universal Module Definition)
Included data structures
- Linked List
- Dictionary - Example
- Multi Dictionary
- Linked Dictionary
- Default Dictionary - Info
- Binary Search Tree
- Binary Search Tree for Key-Value pairs
- Stack
- Queue
- Set - Example
- Bag
- Binary Heap
- Priority Queue
It also includes several functions for manipulating arrays.
Usage
npm install typescript-collections --save
ES6 import ... from
import * as Collections from 'typescript-collections';
or TypeScript import ... require
import Collections = require('typescript-collections');
or JavaScript var ... require
var Collections = require('typescript-collections');
Visual Studio or other TypeScript IDE, will provide you with complete Intellisense (autocomplete) for your types. The compiler will ensure that the collections contain the correct elements.
A sample Visual Studio project is in the demo folder.
Also available on NuGet : http://www.nuget.org/packages/typescript.collections/ Thanks to https://github.com/georgiosd
Example
import * as Collections from 'typescript-collections';
var mySet = new Collections.Set<number>();
mySet.add(123);
mySet.add(123); // Duplicates not allowed in a set
// The following will give error due to wrong type:
// mySet.add("asdf"); // Can only add numbers since that is the type argument.
var myQueue = new Collections.Queue();
myQueue.enqueue(1);
myQueue.enqueue(2);
console.log(myQueue.dequeue()); // prints 1
console.log(myQueue.dequeue()); // prints 2
Typings resolution
Remember to set "moduleResolution": "node"
, so TypeScript compiler can resolve typings in the node_modules/typescript-collections
directory.
In browser usage
You should include umd.js
or umd.min.js
from dist/lib/
directory.
<script src="[server public path]/typescript-collections/dist/lib/umd.min.js"></script>
A note on Equality
Equality is important for hashing (e.g. dictionary / sets). Javascript only allows strings to be keys for the base dictionary {}. This is why the implementation for these data structures uses the item's toString() method.
makeString utility function (aka. JSON.stringify)
A simple function is provided for you when you need a quick toString that uses all properties. E.g:
import * as Collections from 'typescript-collections';
class Car {
constructor(public company: string, public type: string, public year: number) {
}
toString() {
// Short hand. Adds each own property
return Collections.util.makeString(this);
}
}
console.log(new Car("BMW", "A", 2016).toString());
Output:
{company:BMW,type:A,year:2016}
A Sample on Dictionary
import * as Collections from 'typescript-collections';
class Person {
constructor(public name: string, public yearOfBirth: number,public city?:string) {
}
toString() {
return this.name + "-" + this.yearOfBirth; // City is not a part of the key.
}
}
class Car {
constructor(public company: string, public type: string, public year: number) {
}
toString() {
// Short hand. Adds each own property
return Collections.util.makeString(this);
}
}
var dict = new Collections.Dictionary<Person, Car>();
dict.setValue(new Person("john", 1970,"melbourne"), new Car("honda", "city", 2002));
dict.setValue(new Person("gavin", 1984), new Car("ferrari", "F50", 2006));
console.log("Orig");
console.log(dict);
// Changes the same john, since city is not part of key
dict.setValue(new Person("john", 1970, "sydney"), new Car("honda", "accord", 2006));
// Add a new john
dict.setValue(new Person("john", 1971), new Car("nissan", "micra", 2010));
console.log("Updated");
console.log(dict);
// Showing getting / setting a single car:
console.log("Single Item");
var person = new Person("john", 1970);
console.log("-Person:");
console.log(person);
var car = dict.getValue(person);
console.log("-Car:");
console.log(car.toString());
Output:
Orig
{
john-1970 : {company:honda,type:city,year:2002}
gavin-1984 : {company:ferrari,type:F50,year:2006}
}
Updated
{
john-1970 : {company:honda,type:accord,year:2006}
gavin-1984 : {company:ferrari,type:F50,year:2006}
john-1971 : {company:nissan,type:micra,year:2010}
}
Single Item
-Person:
john-1970
-Car:
{company:honda,type:accord,year:2006}
Default Dictionary
Also known as Factory Dictionary
[ref.]
If a key doesn't exist, the Default Dictionary automatically creates it with setDefault(defaultValue)
.
Default Dictionary is a @michaelneu contribution which copies Python's defaultDict.
Development and contributions
Compile, test and check coverage
npm run all
Supported platforms
- Every desktop and mobile browser (including IE6)
- Node.js
If it supports JavaScript, it probably supports this library.
Contact
bas AT basarat.com
Project is based on the excellent original javascript version called buckets