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This module offers a union-find data structure based on disjoint set forests, with path compression and linking by rank.
'a elem
is the type of elements, or references. Like the type 'a ref
of ordinary references, this type supports the operations of creating a new reference, reading a reference, writing a reference, and testing whether two references are the same. Unlike ordinary references, this type also supports a form of merging: union
merges two references, making them "the same reference".
val make : 'a -> 'a elem
make v
creates a fresh reference and sets its content to v
.
val get : 'a elem -> 'a
get x
returns the current content of the reference x
.
val set : 'a elem -> 'a -> unit
set x v
sets the content of the reference x
to v
.
eq x y
determines whether the references x
and y
are "the same reference". At any point in time, eq
is an equivalence relation on references: it is reflexive, symmetric, and transitive. When two references x
and y
are merged by invoking union x y
, they become the same reference: eq x y
becomes true, and remains forever true.
If eq x y
is true initially, then union x y
has no observable effect. Otherwise, union x y
merges the references x
and y
. In either case, after the call, eq x y
is true. union x y
returns either x
or y
. The content of the reference that is returned is unchanged. The content of the reference that is not returned is lost.
find x
returns a representative element of x
's equivalence class. This element is chosen in an unspecified but deterministic manner, so two calls to find x
must return the same result, provided no calls to union
take place in between. eq x y
is equivalent to find x == find y
.
val is_representative : 'a elem -> bool
is_representative x
determines whether x
is the representative element of its equivalence class. It is equivalent to find x == x
.
This functor offers a union-find data structure based on disjoint set forests, with path compression and linking by rank. It does not use primitive mutable state. Instead, it is parameterized over an implementation of stores. This allows the user to choose between many different representations of stores, such as stores based on primitive references, stores based on a (possibly extensible) primitive array, stores based on persistent maps, stores based on persistent or semi-persistent arrays, stores based on transactional references, and so on. The result of this functor is also an implementation of stores, extended with a union
operation that merges two references.
module type STORE = sig ... end
The signature STORE
describes an implementation of first-class stores.
module StoreMap : sig ... end
This module offers stores based on immutable integer maps. These stores support a constant-time copy
operation. The module UnionFind.StoreMap
itself is an implementation of stores based on OCaml's Map
module. The functor UnionFind.StoreMap.Make
can also be used to construct an implementation of stores based on a user-provided implementation of immutable maps.
module StoreRef : sig ... end
This module offers mutable stores based on primitive mutable references. These stores do not support copy
.
module StoreTransactionalRef : sig ... end
This module offers mutable stores based on mutable transactional references. These stores support a simple form of transactions that can be either aborted or committed. Transactions cannot be nested. These stores do not support copy
.
module StoreVector : sig ... end
This module offers mutable stores based on mutable extensible arrays. These stores support copying, but copy
is not cheap; its cost is linear in the size of the store.