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The Rambling Trie is a Ruby implementation of the trie data structure, which includes compression abilities and is designed to be very fast to traverse.
You will need:
See RVM, rbenv or chruby for more information on how to manage Ruby versions.
You can either install it manually with:
gem install rambling-trie
Or, include it in your Gemfile
and bundle it:
gem 'rambling-trie'
To create a new trie, initialize it like this:
trie = Rambling::Trie.create
You can also provide a block and the created trie instance will be yielded for you to perform any operation on it:
Rambling::Trie.create do |trie|
trie << 'word'
end
Additionally, you can provide the path to a file that contains all the words to be added to the trie, and it will read the file and create the complete structure for you, like this:
trie = Rambling::Trie.create '/path/to/file'
By default, a plain text file with the following format will be expected:
some
words
to
populate
the
trie
If you want to use a custom file format, you will need to provide a custom Reader
that defines an #each_word
method
that yields each word contained in the file. Look at the PlainText
reader class for
an example, and at the Configuration section to see how to add your own custom file
readers.
To add new words to the trie, use #add
or its alias #<<
:
trie.add 'word'
trie << 'word'
Or if you have multiple words to add, you can use #concat
or #push
:
trie.concat %w(a collection of words)
trie.push 'a', 'collection', 'of', 'words'
# or
words = %w(a collection of words)
trie.concat words
trie.push *words
And to find out if a word already exists in the trie, use #word?
or its alias #include?
:
trie.word? 'word'
trie.include? 'word'
If you wish to find if part of a word exists in the trie instance, you should call #partial_word?
or its
alias #match?
:
trie.partial_word? 'partial_word'
trie.match? 'partial_word'
To get all the words that start with a particular string, you can use #scan
or its alias #words
:
trie.scan 'hi' # => ['hi', 'high', 'highlight', ...]
trie.words 'hi' # => ['hi', 'high', 'highlight', ...]
To get all the words within a given string, you can use #words_within
:
trie.words_within 'ifdxawesome45someword3' # => ['if', 'aw', 'awe', ...]
trie.words_within 'tktktktk' # => []
Or, if you're just interested in knowing whether a given string contains any valid words or not, you can
use #words_within?
:
trie.words_within? 'ifdxawesome45someword3' # => true
trie.words_within? 'tktktktk' # => false
By default, the Rambling Trie works as a standard trie. Starting from version 0.1.0, you can obtain a compressed trie
from the standard one, by using the compression feature. Just call the #compress!
method on the trie instance:
trie.compress!
This will reduce the size of the trie by using redundant node elimination (redundant nodes are the only-child non-terminal nodes).
Note: The
#compress!
method acts over the trie instance it belongs to and replaces the rootNode
. Also, adding words after compression (with#add
or#<<
) is not supported.
If you want, you can also create a new compressed trie and leave the existing one intact. Just use #compress
instead:
compressed_trie = trie.compress
You can find out if a trie instance is compressed by calling the #compressed?
method. From the #compress
example:
trie.compressed? # => false
compressed_trie.compressed? # => true
Starting from version 0.4.2, you can use any Enumerable
method over a trie instance, and it will iterate over each
word contained in the trie. You can now do things like:
trie.each { |word| puts word }
trie.any? { |word| word.include? 'x' }
trie.all? { |word| word.include? 'x' }
# etc.
Starting from version 1.0.0, you can store a full trie instance on disk and retrieve/use it later on. Loading a trie from disk takes less time, less cpu and less memory than loading every word into the trie every time. This is particularly useful for production applications, when you have word lists that you know are going to be static, or that change with little frequency.
To store a trie on disk, you can use .dump
like this:
Rambling::Trie.dump trie, '/path/to/file'
Then, when you need to use a trie next time, you don't have to create a new one with all the necessary words. Rather,
you can retrieve a previously stored one with .load
like this:
trie = Rambling::Trie.load '/path/to/file'
Currently, these formats are supported to store tries on disk:
When dumping into or loading from disk, the format is determined automatically based on the file extension, so
.yml
or.yaml
files will be handled throughYAML
and.marshal
files throughMarshal
.
Optionally, you can use a .zip
version of the supported formats. In order to do so, you'll have to install
the rubyzip
gem:
gem install rubyzip
Or, include it in your Gemfile
and bundle it:
gem 'rubyzip'
Then, you can load contents form a .zip
file like this:
require 'zip'
trie = Rambling::Trie.load '/path/to/file.zip'
For
.zip
files, the format is also determined automatically based on the file extension, so.yml.zip
or.yaml.zip
files will be handled throughYAML
after decompression and.marshal.zip
files throughMarshal
.
Starting from version 1.0.0, you can change the configuration values used by Rambling Trie. You can now supply:
Compressor
objectNode
builderReaders
(implement #each_word
)reader
Serializers
(implement #dump
and #load
)serializer
You can configure those values by using .config
like this:
require 'rambling-trie'
Rambling::Trie.config do |config|
config.compressor = MyCompressor.new
config.root_builder = lambda { MyNode.new }
config.readers.add :html, MyHtmlReader.new
config.readers.default = config.readers[:html]
config.serializers.add :json, MyJsonSerializer.new
config.serializers.default = config.serializers[:yml]
end
# Create a trie or load one from disk and do things with it...
You can find further API documentation on the autogenerated rambling-trie gem RubyDoc.info page or if you want edge documentation, you can go the GitHub project RubyDoc.info page.
The Rambling Trie has been tested with the following Ruby versions:
No longer supported:
Take a look at the contributing guide to get started, or fire a question to @gonzedge.
Copyright (c) 2012-2024 Edgar González
MIT License
Permission is hereby granted, free of charge, to any person obtaining a copy of this software and associated documentation files (the "Software"), to deal in the Software without restriction, including without limitation the rights to use, copy, modify, merge, publish, distribute, sublicense, and/or sell copies of the Software, and to permit persons to whom the Software is furnished to do so, subject to the following conditions:
The above copyright notice and this permission notice shall be included in all copies or substantial portions of the Software.
THE SOFTWARE IS PROVIDED "AS IS", WITHOUT WARRANTY OF ANY KIND, EXPRESS OR IMPLIED, INCLUDING BUT NOT LIMITED TO THE WARRANTIES OF MERCHANTABILITY, FITNESS FOR A PARTICULAR PURPOSE AND NONINFRINGEMENT. IN NO EVENT SHALL THE AUTHORS OR COPYRIGHT HOLDERS BE LIABLE FOR ANY CLAIM, DAMAGES OR OTHER LIABILITY, WHETHER IN AN ACTION OF CONTRACT, TORT OR OTHERWISE, ARISING FROM, OUT OF OR IN CONNECTION WITH THE SOFTWARE OR THE USE OR OTHER DEALINGS IN THE SOFTWARE.
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We found that rambling-trie demonstrated a healthy version release cadence and project activity because the last version was released less than a year ago. It has 2 open source maintainers collaborating on the project.
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