View Source MapSet (Elixir v1.12.0-rc.1)
Functions that work on sets.
A set is a data structure that can contain unique elements of any kind,
without any particular order. MapSet
is the "go to" set data structure in Elixir.
A set can be constructed using MapSet.new/0
:
iex> MapSet.new()
#MapSet<[]>
Elements in a set don't have to be of the same type and they can be
populated from an enumerable using MapSet.new/1
:
iex> MapSet.new([1, :two, {"three"}])
#MapSet<[1, :two, {"three"}]>
Elements can be inserted using MapSet.put/2
:
iex> MapSet.new([2]) |> MapSet.put(4) |> MapSet.put(0)
#MapSet<[0, 2, 4]>
By definition, sets can't contain duplicate elements: when inserting an element in a set where it's already present, the insertion is simply a no-op.
iex> map_set = MapSet.new()
iex> MapSet.put(map_set, "foo")
#MapSet<["foo"]>
iex> map_set |> MapSet.put("foo") |> MapSet.put("foo")
#MapSet<["foo"]>
A MapSet
is represented internally using the %MapSet{}
struct. This struct
can be used whenever there's a need to pattern match on something being a MapSet
:
iex> match?(%MapSet{}, MapSet.new())
true
Note that, however, the struct fields are private and must not be accessed directly; use the functions in this module to perform operations on sets.
MapSet
s can also be constructed starting from other collection-type data
structures: for example, see MapSet.new/1
or Enum.into/2
.
MapSet
is built on top of Map
, this means that they share many properties,
including logarithmic time complexity. See the documentation for Map
for more
information on its execution time complexity.
Link to this section Summary
Functions
Deletes value
from map_set
.
Returns a set that is map_set1
without the members of map_set2
.
Checks if map_set1
and map_set2
have no members in common.
Checks if two sets are equal.
Returns a set containing only members that map_set1
and map_set2
have in common.
Checks if map_set
contains value
.
Returns a new set.
Creates a set from an enumerable.
Creates a set from an enumerable via the transformation function.
Inserts value
into map_set
if map_set
doesn't already contain it.
Returns the number of elements in map_set
.
Checks if map_set1
's members are all contained in map_set2
.
Converts map_set
to a list.
Returns a set containing all members of map_set1
and map_set2
.
Link to this section Types
Link to this section Functions
Deletes value
from map_set
.
Returns a new set which is a copy of map_set
but without value
.
Examples
iex> map_set = MapSet.new([1, 2, 3])
iex> MapSet.delete(map_set, 4)
#MapSet<[1, 2, 3]>
iex> MapSet.delete(map_set, 2)
#MapSet<[1, 3]>
Returns a set that is map_set1
without the members of map_set2
.
Examples
iex> MapSet.difference(MapSet.new([1, 2]), MapSet.new([2, 3, 4]))
#MapSet<[1]>
Checks if map_set1
and map_set2
have no members in common.
Examples
iex> MapSet.disjoint?(MapSet.new([1, 2]), MapSet.new([3, 4]))
true
iex> MapSet.disjoint?(MapSet.new([1, 2]), MapSet.new([2, 3]))
false
Checks if two sets are equal.
The comparison between elements is done using ===/2
,
which a set with 1
is not equivalent to a set with
1.0
.
Examples
iex> MapSet.equal?(MapSet.new([1, 2]), MapSet.new([2, 1, 1]))
true
iex> MapSet.equal?(MapSet.new([1, 2]), MapSet.new([3, 4]))
false
iex> MapSet.equal?(MapSet.new([1]), MapSet.new([1.0]))
false
Returns a set containing only members that map_set1
and map_set2
have in common.
Examples
iex> MapSet.intersection(MapSet.new([1, 2]), MapSet.new([2, 3, 4]))
#MapSet<[2]>
iex> MapSet.intersection(MapSet.new([1, 2]), MapSet.new([3, 4]))
#MapSet<[]>
Checks if map_set
contains value
.
Examples
iex> MapSet.member?(MapSet.new([1, 2, 3]), 2)
true
iex> MapSet.member?(MapSet.new([1, 2, 3]), 4)
false
@spec new() :: t()
Returns a new set.
Examples
iex> MapSet.new()
#MapSet<[]>
Creates a set from an enumerable.
Examples
iex> MapSet.new([:b, :a, 3])
#MapSet<[3, :a, :b]>
iex> MapSet.new([3, 3, 3, 2, 2, 1])
#MapSet<[1, 2, 3]>
Creates a set from an enumerable via the transformation function.
Examples
iex> MapSet.new([1, 2, 1], fn x -> 2 * x end)
#MapSet<[2, 4]>
Inserts value
into map_set
if map_set
doesn't already contain it.
Examples
iex> MapSet.put(MapSet.new([1, 2, 3]), 3)
#MapSet<[1, 2, 3]>
iex> MapSet.put(MapSet.new([1, 2, 3]), 4)
#MapSet<[1, 2, 3, 4]>
@spec size(t()) :: non_neg_integer()
Returns the number of elements in map_set
.
Examples
iex> MapSet.size(MapSet.new([1, 2, 3]))
3
Checks if map_set1
's members are all contained in map_set2
.
This function checks if map_set1
is a subset of map_set2
.
Examples
iex> MapSet.subset?(MapSet.new([1, 2]), MapSet.new([1, 2, 3]))
true
iex> MapSet.subset?(MapSet.new([1, 2, 3]), MapSet.new([1, 2]))
false
Converts map_set
to a list.
Examples
iex> MapSet.to_list(MapSet.new([1, 2, 3]))
[1, 2, 3]
Returns a set containing all members of map_set1
and map_set2
.
Examples
iex> MapSet.union(MapSet.new([1, 2]), MapSet.new([2, 3, 4]))
#MapSet<[1, 2, 3, 4]>