6 releases
0.3.2 | Oct 19, 2024 |
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0.3.1 | Jun 7, 2022 |
0.3.0 | May 29, 2022 |
0.2.1 | May 19, 2022 |
0.1.0 | Mar 5, 2022 |
#363 in Data structures
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60KB
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SLoC
rbitset
A bit set, being able to hold a fixed amount of booleans in an array of integers.
This is a fork of cbitset that re-implements the BitSet type using const generics
Alternatives
There are already quite a few libraries out there for bit sets, but I can't seem
to find a #![no_std]
one that works with fixed-sized arrays. Most of them seem
to want to be dynamic.
rbitset also is repr(transparent)
, meaning the representation of the struct is
guaranteed to be the same as the inner array, making it usable from stuff where
the struct representation is important, such as
relibc.
Inspiration
I think this is a relatively common thing to do in C, for I stumbled upon the concept in the MUSL standard library. An example is its usage in strspn.
While it's a relatively easy concept, the implementation can be pretty unreadable. So maybe it should be abstracted away with some kind of... zero-cost abstraction?
Example
Bit sets are extremely cheap. You can store any number from 0 to 255 in an array
of 4x 64-bit numbers. The lookup should in theory be O(1). Example usage of this
is once again strspn
. Here it is in rust, using this library:
/// The C standard library function strspn, reimplemented in rust. It works by
/// placing all allowed values in a bit set, and returning on the first
/// character not on the list. A BitSet256 uses no heap allocations and only 4
/// 64-bit integers in stack memory.
fn strspn(s: &[u8], accept: &[u8]) -> usize {
let mut allow = BitSet256::new();
for &c in accept {
allow.insert(c as usize);
}
for (i, &c) in s.iter().enumerate() {
if !allow.contains(c as usize) {
return i;
}
}
s.len()
}
Dependencies
~93–310KB