package tsort
Install
    
    dune-project
 Dependency
Authors
Maintainers
Sources
md5=efe0d2a972638bd07a65b30fed372ed2
    
    
  sha512=162fbeff69a34f00439570f5fbe3112f2ef6d9cf423a9a3c6a7ad1707cc35b6cb19e0bfa1e70c35c12b8a7adfc70a5aca5a43bef63c7f63aca53b396277019b8
    
    
  Description
Easy to use and user-friendly topological sort.
Example:
Tsort.sort [("foundation", []); ("walls", ["foundation"]); ("roof", ["walls"])]
        Published: 02 Apr 2025
README
ocaml-tsort 
ocaml-tsort is a library for sorting graphs in topological order. Its UI/UX is inspired by the classic UNIX tsort(1).
- Uses Kahn's algorithm.
 - Easy to use, but not very fast.
 - Provides friendly error reporting (e.g., if there's a cycle, tells you what the offending nodes are).
 
The input type is (('a * 'a list) list). Essentially, a list of "tasks" mapped to lists of their dependencies.
Sorting DAGs
Most of the time cyclic dependencies are bad. The main function, Tsort.sort returns value of this type:
type 'a sort_result =
  Sorted of 'a list 
| ErrorCycle of 'a listThe function is:
val sort : ('a * 'a list) list -> 'a sort_resultExamples:
# Tsort.sort [
  ("foundation", []);
  ("walls", ["foundation"]);
  ("roof", ["walls"])
] ;;
- : string Tsort.sort_result = Tsort.Sorted ["foundation"; "walls"; "roof"]
# Tsort.sort [
  ("foundation", ["building permit"]);
  ("walls", ["foundation"]);
  ("roof", ["walls"])
] ;;
- : string Tsort.sort_result =
Tsort.Sorted ["building permit"; "foundation"; "walls"; "roof"]
# Tsort.sort [
  ("foundation", ["roof"]);
  ("walls", ["foundation"]);
  ("roof", ["walls"])
] ;;
- : string Tsort.sort_result = Tsort.ErrorCycle ["roof"; "foundation"; "walls"]As you can see from the second example, if there's a dependency on a node that doesn't exist in the input, it's automatically inserted, and assumed to have no dependencies.
Detecting non-existent dependencies
If your graph comes directly from user input, there's a good chance that dependency on a non-existent node is a user error.
To prevent it, use Tsort.find_nonexistent_nodes. Example:
# Tsort.find_nonexistent_nodes [
  ("foundation", ["building permit"]);
  ("walls", ["foundation"]);
  ("roof", ["walls"])] ;;
- : (string * string list) list = [("foundation", ["building permit"])]Sorting graphs with cycles
Sometimes cycles are fine. In this case you can use Tsort.sort_strongly_connected_components to split your graph into strongly connected components and sort its condensation.
Contrived example: suppose you want to line up the Addams family so that children come after parents, but spouse and sibling pairs are not separated.
Tsort.sort_strongly_connected_components [
  "Morticia",  ["Gomez"; "Grandmama"];
  "Gomez",     ["Morticia"; "Grandmama"];
  "Wednesday", ["Morticia"; "Gomez"; "Pugsley"];
  "Pugsley",   ["Morticia"; "Gomez"; "Wednesday"];
  "Grandmama", [];
  "Fester",    []
]
;;
- : string list list =
[["Fester"]; ["Grandmama"]; ["Morticia"; "Gomez"]; ["Wednesday"; "Pugsley"]]There's also Tsort.find_strongly_connected_components if you just want to find what them. For the data above, it would return [["Morticia"; "Gomez"]; ["Wednesday"; "Pugsley"]; ["Grandmama"]; ["Fester"]].
Contributing
To run our complete test suite, run make test-complete (requires docker).