crell / ordered-collection
A fast and robust library for priority and topological sorting.
Fund package maintenance!
Crell
Installs: 75 083
Dependents: 1
Suggesters: 0
Security: 0
Stars: 3
Watchers: 3
Forks: 1
Open Issues: 0
Requires
- php: ~8.1
Requires (Dev)
- phpbench/phpbench: ^1.2
- phpstan/phpstan: ^1.10
- phpunit/phpunit: ^10.4
This package is auto-updated.
Last update: 2024-11-25 14:11:01 UTC
README
Ordered Collection is what it says on the tin; it's a flexible tool for ordering arbitrary items based on either priority values or topological sorting (before/after). It contains two implementations, OrderedCollection
and MultiOrderedCollection
. The former is a bit faster, while the latter is considerably more powerful.
For more on Priority and Topological sorting, see this benchmark blog post comparing the results.
OrderedCollection
OrderedCollection
supports ordering items by integer priorities, or a single before/after value. Internally, it converts the before/after information into priority values, and then sorts the whole list by priority. This is often faster than sorting topologically, but does not handle more than a single before/after entry per item, and cannot detect cyclic dependencies in the before/after ordering.
To use it first, create a new collection:
use Crell\OrderedCollection\OrderedCollection; $collection = new OrderedCollection();
Now, arbitrary items may be added to the collection with addItem()
, addItemBefore()
, and addItemAfter()
. Each item may be an arbitrary value, and they do not need to be of the same type.
When adding an item, you may provide an $id
. If you do not, one will be created on the fly. The ID that was used will be returned by the addItem*()
method. The ID is necessary for before/after ordering. If the ID is already in use, a numeric suffix will be added automatically to ensure uniqueness.
// Adds an item with priority 3, and a random ID will be generated. $kirk = $collection->addItem('James T. Kirk', 3); // Adds an item with priority 5, and an ID of "picard". $picard = $collection->addItem('Jean-Luc Picard', 5, 'picard'); // Adds an item to some somewhere after another item, by its ID. // The ID for it will be auto-generated $sisko = $collection->addItemAfter($picard, 'Benjamin Sisko'); // Adds an item to some somewhere before another item, by its ID. // The new item's ID will be "janeway". $janeway = $collection->addItemBefore($kirk, 'Katheryn Janeway', 'janeway');
Once the items are added, they will be sorted automatically the first time the collection is iterated. OrderedCollection
implements \IteratorAggregate
, so you can use either foreach()
or iterator_to_array()
to get values back out.
foreach ($collection as $item) { print $item . PHP_EOL; }
In this case, would give the following output:
Katheryn Janeway
Jean-Luc Picard
Benjamin Sisko
James T. Kirk
MultiOrderedCollection
This second, more robust option is very similar to OrderedCollection
, and both implement the same OrderableCollection
interface. However, MultiOrderedCollection
has an additional method, add()
, that can handle priority, before, and after ordering, and supports multiple before/after entries on the same item. For that reason, using add()
with MultiOrderedCollection
is recommended, though the common interface will still work on both.
MultiOrderedCollection
converts all priorities into "before" entries, and then sorts the collection topologically. This can be a little bit slower, but it supports multiple before/after directives on a single item and will also detect circular dependencies, which triggers a CycleFound
exception.
The add()
method's signature is like so:
add( mixed $item, ?string $id = null, ?int $priority = null, array $before = [], array $after = [], ): string
The return value is the ID that was assigned to the value, which may then be used in before/after ordering. Of note, the $before
and $after
parameters take an array, not a single ID. Also, because there are so many options, using named arguments is strongly recommended.
The example above, on MultiOrderedCollection
, would look like this:
use Crell\OrderedCollection\MultiOrderedCollection; $collection = new MultiOrderedCollection(); // Adds an item with priority 3, and a random ID will be generated. $kirk = $collection->add('James T. Kirk', priority: 3); // Adds an item with priority 3, and an ID of "picard". $picard = $collection->add('Jean-Luc Picard', priority: 5, id: 'picard'); // Adds an item to some somewhere after another item, by its ID. // The ID for it will be auto-generated $sisko = $collection->add('Benjamin Sisko', after: ['picard']); // Adds an item to some somewhere before another item, by its ID. // The new item's ID will be "janeway". $janeway = $collection->add('Katheryn Janeway', before: [$kirk], id: 'janeway'); foreach ($collection as $item) { print $item . PHP_EOL; }
In this case, the output would be the same as before.
Katheryn Janeway
Jean-Luc Picard
Benjamin Sisko
James T. Kirk
Guarantees
OrderedCollection
and MultiOrderedCollection
provide the following guarantees about the resulting list of values
returned:
- Any item with a higher priority integer will come before an item with a lower priority integer.
- Any item listed as "before" another item will come before that item.
- Any item listed as "after" another item will come after that item.
They do not provide the following guarantees, so while they may happen you should not count on them.
- An item that comes "before" another may not come immediately before. There could still be other items that come between them.
- An item that comes "after" another may not come immediately after. There could still be other items that come between them.
- The order in which items are added is irrelevant. With
OrderedCollection
, items that have the same priority will usually be returned in the order in which they were added, but that is not guaranteed. WithMultiOrderedCollection
, they will most likely not be returned in the order they were added. In short, if you care about the order at all, specify it explicitly.
Types
The items being sorted are not used at all during the process. While the example above shows strings, you can use arrays, objects, strings, numbers, or whatever else you'd like. They may be of the same type, or different types. The collection objects don't care.
Change log
Please see CHANGELOG for more information on what has changed recently.
Testing
$ composer test
Contributing
Please see CONTRIBUTING and CODE_OF_CONDUCT for details.
Security
If you discover any security related issues, please use the GitHub security reporting form rather than the issue queue.
Credits
License
The Lesser GPL version 3 or later. Please see License File for more information.