avl-tree-typed 2.0.5 → 2.1.1

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Files changed (104) hide show
  1. package/dist/common/index.js +1 -1
  2. package/dist/constants/index.js +1 -1
  3. package/dist/data-structures/base/iterable-element-base.d.ts +186 -83
  4. package/dist/data-structures/base/iterable-element-base.js +149 -107
  5. package/dist/data-structures/base/iterable-entry-base.d.ts +95 -119
  6. package/dist/data-structures/base/iterable-entry-base.js +59 -116
  7. package/dist/data-structures/base/linear-base.d.ts +250 -192
  8. package/dist/data-structures/base/linear-base.js +137 -274
  9. package/dist/data-structures/binary-tree/avl-tree-counter.d.ts +126 -158
  10. package/dist/data-structures/binary-tree/avl-tree-counter.js +171 -205
  11. package/dist/data-structures/binary-tree/avl-tree-multi-map.d.ts +100 -69
  12. package/dist/data-structures/binary-tree/avl-tree-multi-map.js +135 -87
  13. package/dist/data-structures/binary-tree/avl-tree.d.ts +138 -149
  14. package/dist/data-structures/binary-tree/avl-tree.js +208 -195
  15. package/dist/data-structures/binary-tree/binary-tree.d.ts +476 -632
  16. package/dist/data-structures/binary-tree/binary-tree.js +602 -873
  17. package/dist/data-structures/binary-tree/bst.d.ts +258 -306
  18. package/dist/data-structures/binary-tree/bst.js +505 -481
  19. package/dist/data-structures/binary-tree/red-black-tree.d.ts +107 -179
  20. package/dist/data-structures/binary-tree/red-black-tree.js +114 -209
  21. package/dist/data-structures/binary-tree/tree-counter.d.ts +132 -154
  22. package/dist/data-structures/binary-tree/tree-counter.js +172 -203
  23. package/dist/data-structures/binary-tree/tree-multi-map.d.ts +72 -69
  24. package/dist/data-structures/binary-tree/tree-multi-map.js +105 -85
  25. package/dist/data-structures/graph/abstract-graph.d.ts +238 -233
  26. package/dist/data-structures/graph/abstract-graph.js +267 -237
  27. package/dist/data-structures/graph/directed-graph.d.ts +108 -224
  28. package/dist/data-structures/graph/directed-graph.js +146 -233
  29. package/dist/data-structures/graph/map-graph.d.ts +49 -55
  30. package/dist/data-structures/graph/map-graph.js +56 -59
  31. package/dist/data-structures/graph/undirected-graph.d.ts +103 -146
  32. package/dist/data-structures/graph/undirected-graph.js +129 -149
  33. package/dist/data-structures/hash/hash-map.d.ts +164 -338
  34. package/dist/data-structures/hash/hash-map.js +270 -457
  35. package/dist/data-structures/heap/heap.d.ts +214 -289
  36. package/dist/data-structures/heap/heap.js +340 -349
  37. package/dist/data-structures/heap/max-heap.d.ts +11 -47
  38. package/dist/data-structures/heap/max-heap.js +11 -66
  39. package/dist/data-structures/heap/min-heap.d.ts +12 -47
  40. package/dist/data-structures/heap/min-heap.js +11 -66
  41. package/dist/data-structures/linked-list/doubly-linked-list.d.ts +231 -347
  42. package/dist/data-structures/linked-list/doubly-linked-list.js +368 -494
  43. package/dist/data-structures/linked-list/singly-linked-list.d.ts +261 -310
  44. package/dist/data-structures/linked-list/singly-linked-list.js +447 -466
  45. package/dist/data-structures/linked-list/skip-linked-list.d.ts +0 -107
  46. package/dist/data-structures/linked-list/skip-linked-list.js +0 -100
  47. package/dist/data-structures/priority-queue/max-priority-queue.d.ts +12 -56
  48. package/dist/data-structures/priority-queue/max-priority-queue.js +11 -78
  49. package/dist/data-structures/priority-queue/min-priority-queue.d.ts +11 -57
  50. package/dist/data-structures/priority-queue/min-priority-queue.js +10 -79
  51. package/dist/data-structures/priority-queue/priority-queue.d.ts +2 -61
  52. package/dist/data-structures/priority-queue/priority-queue.js +8 -83
  53. package/dist/data-structures/queue/deque.d.ts +227 -254
  54. package/dist/data-structures/queue/deque.js +309 -348
  55. package/dist/data-structures/queue/queue.d.ts +180 -201
  56. package/dist/data-structures/queue/queue.js +265 -248
  57. package/dist/data-structures/stack/stack.d.ts +124 -102
  58. package/dist/data-structures/stack/stack.js +181 -125
  59. package/dist/data-structures/trie/trie.d.ts +164 -165
  60. package/dist/data-structures/trie/trie.js +189 -172
  61. package/dist/interfaces/binary-tree.d.ts +56 -6
  62. package/dist/interfaces/graph.d.ts +16 -0
  63. package/dist/types/data-structures/base/base.d.ts +1 -1
  64. package/dist/types/data-structures/graph/abstract-graph.d.ts +4 -0
  65. package/dist/types/utils/utils.d.ts +1 -0
  66. package/dist/utils/number.js +1 -2
  67. package/dist/utils/utils.d.ts +1 -1
  68. package/dist/utils/utils.js +9 -8
  69. package/package.json +15 -15
  70. package/src/data-structures/base/iterable-element-base.ts +238 -115
  71. package/src/data-structures/base/iterable-entry-base.ts +96 -120
  72. package/src/data-structures/base/linear-base.ts +271 -277
  73. package/src/data-structures/binary-tree/avl-tree-counter.ts +196 -217
  74. package/src/data-structures/binary-tree/avl-tree-multi-map.ts +188 -102
  75. package/src/data-structures/binary-tree/avl-tree.ts +237 -206
  76. package/src/data-structures/binary-tree/binary-tree.ts +665 -896
  77. package/src/data-structures/binary-tree/bst.ts +565 -572
  78. package/src/data-structures/binary-tree/red-black-tree.ts +157 -223
  79. package/src/data-structures/binary-tree/tree-counter.ts +195 -219
  80. package/src/data-structures/binary-tree/tree-multi-map.ts +127 -98
  81. package/src/data-structures/graph/abstract-graph.ts +339 -264
  82. package/src/data-structures/graph/directed-graph.ts +146 -236
  83. package/src/data-structures/graph/map-graph.ts +63 -60
  84. package/src/data-structures/graph/undirected-graph.ts +129 -152
  85. package/src/data-structures/hash/hash-map.ts +274 -496
  86. package/src/data-structures/heap/heap.ts +389 -402
  87. package/src/data-structures/heap/max-heap.ts +12 -76
  88. package/src/data-structures/heap/min-heap.ts +13 -76
  89. package/src/data-structures/linked-list/doubly-linked-list.ts +426 -530
  90. package/src/data-structures/linked-list/singly-linked-list.ts +495 -517
  91. package/src/data-structures/linked-list/skip-linked-list.ts +1 -108
  92. package/src/data-structures/priority-queue/max-priority-queue.ts +12 -87
  93. package/src/data-structures/priority-queue/min-priority-queue.ts +11 -88
  94. package/src/data-structures/priority-queue/priority-queue.ts +3 -92
  95. package/src/data-structures/queue/deque.ts +381 -357
  96. package/src/data-structures/queue/queue.ts +310 -264
  97. package/src/data-structures/stack/stack.ts +217 -131
  98. package/src/data-structures/trie/trie.ts +240 -175
  99. package/src/interfaces/binary-tree.ts +240 -6
  100. package/src/interfaces/graph.ts +37 -0
  101. package/src/types/data-structures/base/base.ts +5 -5
  102. package/src/types/data-structures/graph/abstract-graph.ts +5 -0
  103. package/src/types/utils/utils.ts +2 -0
  104. package/src/utils/utils.ts +9 -14
@@ -3,91 +3,22 @@ Object.defineProperty(exports, "__esModule", { value: true });
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3
  exports.MinPriorityQueue = void 0;
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  const priority_queue_1 = require("./priority-queue");
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  /**
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- *
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+ * Min-oriented priority queue (min-heap) built on {@link PriorityQueue}.
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+ * The queue removes the smallest element first under the provided comparator.
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+ * Provide a custom comparator if you store non-primitive objects.
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+ * @template E Element type stored in the queue.
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+ * @template R Extra record/metadata associated with each element.
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+ * @example
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  */
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  class MinPriorityQueue extends priority_queue_1.PriorityQueue {
9
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  /**
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- * The constructor initializes a PriorityQueue with optional elements and options, including a
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- * comparator function.
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- * @param elements - The `elements` parameter is an iterable object that contains the initial
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- * elements to be added to the priority queue. It is optional and defaults to an empty array if not
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- * provided.
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- * @param options - The `options` parameter is an object that contains additional configuration
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- * options for the priority queue. In this case, it has a property called `comparator,` which is a
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- * function used to compare elements in the priority queue. The `comparator` function takes two
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- * parameters `a` and `b`
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+ * Creates a min-priority queue.
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+ * @param elements Optional initial elements to insert.
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+ * @param options Optional configuration (e.g., `comparator`, `toElementFn`).
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+ * @remarks Complexity Time: O(n log n) when inserting n elements incrementally; Space: O(n).
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  */
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  constructor(elements = [], options) {
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  super(elements, options);
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  }
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- /**
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- * The `clone` function returns a new instance of the `MinPriorityQueue` class with the same
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- * comparator and toElementFn as the original instance.
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- * @returns The method is returning a new instance of the `MinPriorityQueue` class with the same
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- * properties as the current instance.
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- */
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- clone() {
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- return new MinPriorityQueue(this, { comparator: this.comparator, toElementFn: this.toElementFn });
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- }
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- /**
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- * Time Complexity: O(n)
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- * Space Complexity: O(n)
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- *
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- * The `filter` function creates a new MinPriorityQueue object containing elements that pass a given callback
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- * function.
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- * @param callback - The `callback` parameter is a function that will be called for each element in
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- * the heap. It takes three arguments: the current element, the index of the current element, and the
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- * heap itself. The callback function should return a boolean value indicating whether the current
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- * element should be included in the filtered list
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- * @param {any} [thisArg] - The `thisArg` parameter is an optional argument that specifies the value
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- * to be used as `this` when executing the `callback` function. If `thisArg` is provided, it will be
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- * passed as the `this` value to the `callback` function. If `thisArg` is
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- * @returns The `filter` method is returning a new `MinPriorityQueue` object that contains the elements that pass
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- * the filter condition specified by the `callback` function.
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- */
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- filter(callback, thisArg) {
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- const filteredPriorityQueue = new MinPriorityQueue([], {
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- toElementFn: this.toElementFn,
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- comparator: this.comparator
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- });
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- let index = 0;
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- for (const current of this) {
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- if (callback.call(thisArg, current, index, this)) {
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- filteredPriorityQueue.add(current);
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- }
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- index++;
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- }
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- return filteredPriorityQueue;
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- }
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- /**
63
- * Time Complexity: O(n log n)
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- * Space Complexity: O(n)
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- *
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- * The `map` function creates a new heap by applying a callback function to each element of the
67
- * original heap.
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- * @param callback - The `callback` parameter is a function that will be called for each element in
69
- * the heap. It takes three arguments: `el` (the current element), `index` (the index of the current
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- * element), and `this` (the heap itself). The callback function should return a value of
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- * @param comparator - The `comparator` parameter is a function that defines the order of the
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- * elements in the heap. It takes two elements `a` and `b` as arguments and returns a negative number
73
- * if `a` should be placed before `b`, a positive number if `a` should be placed after
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- * @param [toElementFn] - The `toElementFn` parameter is an optional function that converts the raw
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- * element `RR` to the desired type `T`. It takes a single argument `rawElement` of type `RR` and
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- * returns a value of type `T`. This function is used to transform the elements of the original
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- * @param {any} [thisArg] - The `thisArg` parameter is an optional argument that allows you to
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- * specify the value of `this` within the callback function. It is used to set the context or scope
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- * in which the callback function will be executed. If `thisArg` is provided, it will be used as the
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- * value of
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- * @returns a new instance of the `MinPriorityQueue` class with the mapped elements.
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- */
83
- map(callback, comparator, toElementFn, thisArg) {
84
- const mappedPriorityQueue = new MinPriorityQueue([], { comparator, toElementFn });
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- let index = 0;
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- for (const el of this) {
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- mappedPriorityQueue.add(callback.call(thisArg, el, index, this));
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- index++;
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- }
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- return mappedPriorityQueue;
91
- }
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23
  }
93
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  exports.MinPriorityQueue = MinPriorityQueue;
@@ -5,70 +5,11 @@
5
5
  * @copyright Copyright (c) 2022 Kirk Qi <qilinaus@gmail.com>
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6
  * @license MIT License
7
7
  */
8
- import type { Comparator, ElementCallback, PriorityQueueOptions } from '../../types';
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+ import type { PriorityQueueOptions } from '../../types';
9
9
  import { Heap } from '../heap';
10
10
  /**
11
- * 1. Element Priority: In a PriorityQueue, elements are sorted according to their priority. Each dequeue (element removal) operation removes the element with the highest priority. The priority can be determined based on the natural ordering of the elements or through a provided comparator (Comparator).
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- * 2. Heap-Based Implementation: PriorityQueue is typically implemented using a binary heap, allowing both insertion and removal operations to be completed in O(log n) time, where n is the number of elements in the queue.
13
- * 3. Task Scheduling: In systems where tasks need to be processed based on the urgency of tasks rather than the order of arrival.
14
- * 4. Dijkstra's Algorithm: In shortest path algorithms for graphs, used to select the next shortest edge to visit.
15
- * 5. Huffman Coding: Used to select the smallest node combination when constructing a Huffman tree.
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- * 6. Kth Largest Element in a Data Stream: Used to maintain a min-heap of size K for quickly finding the Kth largest element in stream data
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+ * @example
17
12
  */
18
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  export declare class PriorityQueue<E = any, R = any> extends Heap<E, R> {
19
- /**
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- * The constructor initializes a priority queue with optional elements and options.
21
- * @param elements - The `elements` parameter is an iterable object that contains the initial
22
- * elements to be added to the priority queue. It is an optional parameter, and if not provided, the
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- * priority queue will be initialized as empty.
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- * @param [options] - The `options` parameter is an optional object that can be used to customize the
25
- * behavior of the priority queue. It can contain the following properties:
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- */
27
14
  constructor(elements?: Iterable<E> | Iterable<R>, options?: PriorityQueueOptions<E, R>);
28
- /**
29
- * The `clone` function returns a new instance of the `PriorityQueue` class with the same comparator
30
- * and toElementFn as the original instance.
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- * @returns The method is returning a new instance of the `PriorityQueue` class with the same
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- * elements and properties as the current instance.
33
- */
34
- clone(): PriorityQueue<E, R>;
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- /**
36
- * Time Complexity: O(n)
37
- * Space Complexity: O(n)
38
- *
39
- * The `filter` function creates a new PriorityQueue object containing elements that pass a given callback
40
- * function.
41
- * @param callback - The `callback` parameter is a function that will be called for each element in
42
- * the heap. It takes three arguments: the current element, the index of the current element, and the
43
- * heap itself. The callback function should return a boolean value indicating whether the current
44
- * element should be included in the filtered list
45
- * @param {any} [thisArg] - The `thisArg` parameter is an optional argument that specifies the value
46
- * to be used as `this` when executing the `callback` function. If `thisArg` is provided, it will be
47
- * passed as the `this` value to the `callback` function. If `thisArg` is
48
- * @returns The `filter` method is returning a new `PriorityQueue` object that contains the elements that pass
49
- * the filter condition specified by the `callback` function.
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- */
51
- filter(callback: ElementCallback<E, R, boolean>, thisArg?: any): PriorityQueue<E, R>;
52
- /**
53
- * Time Complexity: O(n log n)
54
- * Space Complexity: O(n)
55
- *
56
- * The `map` function creates a new heap by applying a callback function to each element of the
57
- * original heap.
58
- * @param callback - The `callback` parameter is a function that will be called for each element in
59
- * the heap. It takes three arguments: `el` (the current element), `index` (the index of the current
60
- * element), and `this` (the heap itself). The callback function should return a value of
61
- * @param comparator - The `comparator` parameter is a function that defines the order of the
62
- * elements in the heap. It takes two elements `a` and `b` as arguments and returns a negative number
63
- * if `a` should be placed before `b`, a positive number if `a` should be placed after
64
- * @param [toElementFn] - The `toElementFn` parameter is an optional function that converts the raw
65
- * element `RR` to the desired type `T`. It takes a single argument `rawElement` of type `RR` and
66
- * returns a value of type `T`. This function is used to transform the elements of the original
67
- * @param {any} [thisArg] - The `thisArg` parameter is an optional argument that allows you to
68
- * specify the value of `this` within the callback function. It is used to set the context or scope
69
- * in which the callback function will be executed. If `thisArg` is provided, it will be used as the
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- * value of
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- * @returns a new instance of the `PriorityQueue` class with the mapped elements.
72
- */
73
- map<EM, RM>(callback: ElementCallback<E, R, EM>, comparator: Comparator<EM>, toElementFn?: (rawElement: RM) => EM, thisArg?: any): PriorityQueue<EM, RM>;
74
15
  }
@@ -1,95 +1,20 @@
1
1
  "use strict";
2
+ /**
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+ * data-structure-typed
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+ *
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+ * @author Kirk Qi
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+ * @copyright Copyright (c) 2022 Kirk Qi <qilinaus@gmail.com>
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+ * @license MIT License
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+ */
2
9
  Object.defineProperty(exports, "__esModule", { value: true });
3
10
  exports.PriorityQueue = void 0;
4
11
  const heap_1 = require("../heap");
5
12
  /**
6
- * 1. Element Priority: In a PriorityQueue, elements are sorted according to their priority. Each dequeue (element removal) operation removes the element with the highest priority. The priority can be determined based on the natural ordering of the elements or through a provided comparator (Comparator).
7
- * 2. Heap-Based Implementation: PriorityQueue is typically implemented using a binary heap, allowing both insertion and removal operations to be completed in O(log n) time, where n is the number of elements in the queue.
8
- * 3. Task Scheduling: In systems where tasks need to be processed based on the urgency of tasks rather than the order of arrival.
9
- * 4. Dijkstra's Algorithm: In shortest path algorithms for graphs, used to select the next shortest edge to visit.
10
- * 5. Huffman Coding: Used to select the smallest node combination when constructing a Huffman tree.
11
- * 6. Kth Largest Element in a Data Stream: Used to maintain a min-heap of size K for quickly finding the Kth largest element in stream data
13
+ * @example
12
14
  */
13
15
  class PriorityQueue extends heap_1.Heap {
14
- /**
15
- * The constructor initializes a priority queue with optional elements and options.
16
- * @param elements - The `elements` parameter is an iterable object that contains the initial
17
- * elements to be added to the priority queue. It is an optional parameter, and if not provided, the
18
- * priority queue will be initialized as empty.
19
- * @param [options] - The `options` parameter is an optional object that can be used to customize the
20
- * behavior of the priority queue. It can contain the following properties:
21
- */
22
16
  constructor(elements = [], options) {
23
17
  super(elements, options);
24
18
  }
25
- /**
26
- * The `clone` function returns a new instance of the `PriorityQueue` class with the same comparator
27
- * and toElementFn as the original instance.
28
- * @returns The method is returning a new instance of the `PriorityQueue` class with the same
29
- * elements and properties as the current instance.
30
- */
31
- clone() {
32
- return new PriorityQueue(this, { comparator: this.comparator, toElementFn: this.toElementFn });
33
- }
34
- /**
35
- * Time Complexity: O(n)
36
- * Space Complexity: O(n)
37
- *
38
- * The `filter` function creates a new PriorityQueue object containing elements that pass a given callback
39
- * function.
40
- * @param callback - The `callback` parameter is a function that will be called for each element in
41
- * the heap. It takes three arguments: the current element, the index of the current element, and the
42
- * heap itself. The callback function should return a boolean value indicating whether the current
43
- * element should be included in the filtered list
44
- * @param {any} [thisArg] - The `thisArg` parameter is an optional argument that specifies the value
45
- * to be used as `this` when executing the `callback` function. If `thisArg` is provided, it will be
46
- * passed as the `this` value to the `callback` function. If `thisArg` is
47
- * @returns The `filter` method is returning a new `PriorityQueue` object that contains the elements that pass
48
- * the filter condition specified by the `callback` function.
49
- */
50
- filter(callback, thisArg) {
51
- const filteredPriorityQueue = new PriorityQueue([], {
52
- toElementFn: this.toElementFn,
53
- comparator: this.comparator
54
- });
55
- let index = 0;
56
- for (const current of this) {
57
- if (callback.call(thisArg, current, index, this)) {
58
- filteredPriorityQueue.add(current);
59
- }
60
- index++;
61
- }
62
- return filteredPriorityQueue;
63
- }
64
- /**
65
- * Time Complexity: O(n log n)
66
- * Space Complexity: O(n)
67
- *
68
- * The `map` function creates a new heap by applying a callback function to each element of the
69
- * original heap.
70
- * @param callback - The `callback` parameter is a function that will be called for each element in
71
- * the heap. It takes three arguments: `el` (the current element), `index` (the index of the current
72
- * element), and `this` (the heap itself). The callback function should return a value of
73
- * @param comparator - The `comparator` parameter is a function that defines the order of the
74
- * elements in the heap. It takes two elements `a` and `b` as arguments and returns a negative number
75
- * if `a` should be placed before `b`, a positive number if `a` should be placed after
76
- * @param [toElementFn] - The `toElementFn` parameter is an optional function that converts the raw
77
- * element `RR` to the desired type `T`. It takes a single argument `rawElement` of type `RR` and
78
- * returns a value of type `T`. This function is used to transform the elements of the original
79
- * @param {any} [thisArg] - The `thisArg` parameter is an optional argument that allows you to
80
- * specify the value of `this` within the callback function. It is used to set the context or scope
81
- * in which the callback function will be executed. If `thisArg` is provided, it will be used as the
82
- * value of
83
- * @returns a new instance of the `PriorityQueue` class with the mapped elements.
84
- */
85
- map(callback, comparator, toElementFn, thisArg) {
86
- const mappedPriorityQueue = new PriorityQueue([], { comparator, toElementFn });
87
- let index = 0;
88
- for (const el of this) {
89
- mappedPriorityQueue.add(callback.call(thisArg, el, index, this));
90
- index++;
91
- }
92
- return mappedPriorityQueue;
93
- }
94
19
  }
95
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  exports.PriorityQueue = PriorityQueue;