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Bidirectional Hash table in Ruby

开发者 https://www.devze.com 2023-03-24 17:49 出处:网络
I need a bidirectional Hash table in Ruby. For example: h = {:abc => 123, :xyz => 789, :qaz => 789, :wsx => [888, 999]}

I need a bidirectional Hash table in Ruby. For example:

h = {:abc => 123, :xyz => 789, :qaz => 789, :wsx => [888, 999]}
h.fetch(:xyz) # => 789
h.rfetch(123) # => abc
h.rfetch(789) # => [:xyz, :qaz]
h.rfetch(888) # => :wsx

Method rfetch means reversed fetch and is only my proposal.

Note three things:

  1. If multiple keys map at the开发者_C百科 same value then rfetch returns all of them, packed in array.
  2. If value is an array then rfetch looks for its param among elements of the array.
  3. Bidirectional Hash means that both fetch and rfetch should execute in constant time.

Does such structure exists in Ruby (including external libraries)?

I thought about implementing it using two one-directional Hashes synchronized when one of them is modified (and packing it into class to avoid synchronization problems) but maybe I could use an already existing solution?


You could build something yourself pretty easily, just use a simple object that wraps two hashes (one for the forward direction, one for the reverse). For example:

class BiHash
    def initialize
        @forward = Hash.new { |h, k| h[k] = [ ] }
        @reverse = Hash.new { |h, k| h[k] = [ ] }
    end

    def insert(k, v)
        @forward[k].push(v)
        @reverse[v].push(k)
        v
    end

    def fetch(k)
        fetch_from(@forward, k)
    end

    def rfetch(v)
        fetch_from(@reverse, v)
    end

    protected

    def fetch_from(h, k)
        return nil if(!h.has_key?(k))
        v = h[k]
        v.length == 1 ? v.first : v.dup
    end
end

Look ups will behave just like normal hash lookups (because they are normal hash lookups). Add some operators and maybe decent to_s and inspect implementations and you're good.

Such a thing works like this:

b = BiHash.new
b.insert(:a, 'a')
b.insert(:a, 'b')
b.insert(:a, 'c')
b.insert(:b, 'a')
b.insert(:c, 'x')

puts b.fetch(:a).inspect            # ["a", "b", "c"]
puts b.fetch(:b).inspect            # "a"
puts b.rfetch('a').inspect          # [:a, :b]
puts b.rfetch('x').inspect          # :c
puts b.fetch(:not_there).inspect    # nil
puts b.rfetch('not there').inspect  # nil

There's nothing wrong with building your tools when you need them.


There is no such structure built-in in Ruby.

Note that Hash#rassoc does something similar, but it returns only the first match and is linear-time:

h = {:abc => 123, :xyz => 789, :qaz => 789, :wsx => [888, 999]}
h.rassoc(123) # => [:abc, 123]

Also, it isn't possible to fullfill your requirements in Ruby in a perfectly safe manner, as you won't be able to detect changes in values that are arrays. E.g.:

h = MyBidirectionalArray.new(:foo => 42, :bar => [:hello, :world])
h.rfetch(:world) # => :bar
h[:bar].shift
h[:bar] # => [:world]
h.rfetch(:world) # => should be nil, but how to detect this??

Computing a hash everytime to detect a change will make your lookup linear-time. You could duplicate the array-values and freeze them, though (like Ruby does for Hash keys that are strings!)

What you seem to need is a Graph class, which could have a different API than a Hash, no? You can check out rgl or similar, but I don't know how they're implemented.

Good luck.


There is a Hash#invert method (http://www.ruby-doc.org/core-2.1.0/Hash.html#method-i-invert) to achieve this. It won't map multiple values to an array though.


Try this:

class Hash
  def rfetch val
    select { |k,v| v.is_a?(Array) ? v.include?(val) : v == val }.map { |x| x[0] }
  end
end


If you're not doing lots of updates to this hash, you might be able to use inverthash.

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