Heap implementation based on a pairing-heap.
This heap implementations supports an arbitrary element type, via a comparison
function. If you need a heap with elements ordered by integers, then it may be more
efficient to use a Timing_wheel.Priority_queue, which is a heap implementation
specialized to integer keys, and with some other performance differences and usage
restrictions.
of_sexp and bin_io functions aren't supplied for heaps due to the difficulties in reconstructing the correct comparison function when de-serializing.
Checks whether the provided element is there, using polymorphic compare if equal
is not provided
fold t ~init ~f returns f (... f (f (f init e1) e2) e3 ...) en, where e1..en
are the elements of t
Returns true if and only if there exists an element for which the provided
function evaluates to true. This is a short-circuiting operation.
Returns true if and only if the provided function evaluates to true for all
elements. This is a short-circuiting operation.
Returns the number of elements for which the provided function evaluates to true.
Returns as an option the first element for which f evaluates to true.
Returns the first evaluation of f that returns Some, and returns None if there
is no such element.
Returns a minimum (resp maximum) element from the collection using the provided
cmp function, or None if the collection is empty. In case of a tie, the first
element encountered while traversing the collection is returned. The implementation
uses fold so it has the same complexity as fold.
Even though these two functions are part of Container.S1, they are documented
separately to make sure there is no confusion. They are independent of the
comparison function used to order the heap. Instead, a traversal of the entire
structure is done using the provided cmp function to find a min or max.
If you want to access the smallest element of the heap according to the heap's
comparison function in constant time, you should use top.
create ?min_size ~cmp returns a new min-heap that can store min_size elements
without reallocations, using ordering function cmp.
The top of the heap is the smallest element as determined by the provided comparison
function. In particular, if cmp x y < 0 then x will be "on top of" y in the
heap.
Memory use is surprising in two ways:
1. The underlying pool never shrinks, so current memory use will at least be proportional to the largest number of elements that the heap has ever held.
2. Not all the memory is freed upon remove, but rather after some number of
subsequent pop operations. Alternating add and remove operations can therefore
use unbounded memory.
min_size (see create) will be set to the size of the input array or list.
returns the top (i.e., smallest) element of the heap
remove_top t does nothing if t is empty
This removes and returns the top (i.e. least) element
pop_if t cond returns Some top_element of t if it satisfies condition
cond, removing it, or None in any other case.