swiss
golang-set
swiss | golang-set | |
---|---|---|
3 | 6 | |
675 | 3,925 | |
3.7% | - | |
3.7 | 5.3 | |
about 1 month ago | 4 months ago | |
Go | Go | |
Apache License 2.0 | GNU General Public License v3.0 or later |
Stars - the number of stars that a project has on GitHub. Growth - month over month growth in stars.
Activity is a relative number indicating how actively a project is being developed. Recent commits have higher weight than older ones.
For example, an activity of 9.0 indicates that a project is amongst the top 10% of the most actively developed projects that we are tracking.
swiss
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One Billion Row Challenge in Golang - From 95s to 1.96s
Time to deal with the large elephant in the room, the runtime.mapaccess2_fast64 map lookup. Despite spending some hours of research, I couldn't found any viable way to optimize the builtin map. However, there is a community alternative called Swiss Map, which sells itself as faster and more memory efficient than the builtin one. Replacing it is almost a drop-in, with just some syntax changes:
- Golang Port of Abseil's SwissTable
- SwissMap: A Golang Port of SwissTable
golang-set
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Is there something similar to blessed.rs ?
If it were true, there wouldn't be any 3rd-party libs for Go and everybody used just the stdlib. For instance, if you need a set, you can use https://github.com/deckarep/golang-set . Of course, you can do it with the stdlib with map, but if you don't want to do that, use golang-set . I think Python has a much larger stdlib and yet, Python has tons of 3rd-party packages.
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Any major projects using generics?
golang-set is a set implementation used by docker, ethereum and others. 2.8k stars on GitHub. Pretty popular project. Not sure if it counts as major. https://github.com/deckarep/golang-set
- When will Go get sets?
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Does anyone else get tired of the "that's trivial to implement" excuse for leaving things out of the standard library?
Why not look at something like https://github.com/deckarep/golang-set ?
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Go 1.18 Released
It depends on the level of abstraction you're addressing. One level may be "i need to store things with a quick search function", another may be "i need a storage of ordered names and expiry date for things", etc until you get to "I need a binary tree which orders by comparable types".
Where you split that process as a separate library you either decide to write or reuse - that becomes the problem to solve. A set implementation may be a problem to solve: https://github.com/deckarep/golang-set A btree may be a problem to solve: https://gitlab.com/cznic/b/-/tree/master/v2
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Major update to the golang-set repo now supporting generics syntax for Go 1.18beta1 release
This pre-release only exists on the generics branch at: https://github.com/deckarep/golang-set/tree/generics. Eventually this release would be tagged with a 2.0 release tag name.
What are some alternatives?
quadtree - Generic, zero-alloc, 100%-test covered Quadtree for golang
gods - GoDS (Go Data Structures) - Sets, Lists, Stacks, Maps, Trees, Queues, and much more
gen - gen is a generic general use Go functions library with the intention of replacing duplicated code where the same functionality is needed across multiple types, and provides a common interface for the functionality. The library is designed to be used in a wide variety of projects and is designed to be easy to use.
go-adaptive-radix-tree - Adaptive Radix Trees implemented in Go
algorithms - CLRS study. Codes are written with golang.
gota - Gota: DataFrames and data wrangling in Go (Golang)
std - An enhanced version of the standard library based the new Generics feature.
ttlcache - An in-memory cache with item expiration and generics [Moved to: https://github.com/jellydator/ttlcache]
trie - Data structure and relevant algorithms for extremely fast prefix/fuzzy string searching.
bitset - Go package implementing bitsets
mafsa
hyperloglog - HyperLogLog with lots of sugar (Sparse, LogLog-Beta bias correction and TailCut space reduction) brought to you by Axiom