A drop-in replacement for ES native Map
and Set
with deep equality support for objects.
npm install deep-equality-data-structures
ES Map
and Set
only support referential equality:
interface MyType {
a: number;
}
const set = new Set<MyType>();
set.add({ a: 1 });
set.add({ a: 1 });
set.size; // 2
Now, using deep equality:
import { DeepSet } from 'deep-equality-data-structures';
interface MyType {
a: number;
}
const set = new DeepSet<MyType>();
set.add({ a: 1 });
set.add({ a: 1 });
set.size; // 1
This project relies on the object-hash library to normalize object types to unique strings.
The following supplemental comparisons/methods are included:
equals
contains
union
intersection
difference
// COMPARISONS
const set1 = new DeepSet([{ a: 1 }, { b: 2 }]);
const set2 = new DeepSet([{ b: 2 }, { a: 1 }]);
set1.equals(set2); // true
const set3 = new DeepSet([{ a: 1 }]);
set1.equals(set3); // false
set1.contains(set3); // true
// SET OPERATIONS (available for maps, too)
const set3 = new DeepSet([{ a: 1 }, { b: 2 }]);
const set4 = new DeepSet([{ b: 2 }, { c: 3 }]);
set3.union(set4); // DeepSet([{ a: 1 }, { b: 2 }, { c: 3 }])
set3.intersection(set4); // DeepSet([{ b: 2 }])
set3.difference(set4); // DeepSet([{ a: 1 }])
The default settings should be suitable for most use cases, but behavior can be configured.
new DeepSet<V>(values?, options?)
new DeepMap<K,V>(entries?, options?)
The options
argument is a superset of the options defined for object-hash, with the same defaults (exception: the default algoritm is md5
). There are also library-specific options.
-
transformer
- a custom function that transforms Map keys/Set values prior to hashing. It does not affect the values that are stored.type MyType = { val: number; other: number }; const a: MyType = { val: 1, other: 1 }; const b: MyType = { val: 1, other: 2 }; const transformer = (obj: MyType) => ({ val: obj.val }); const set = new DeepSet([a, b]); set.size; // 2 const set = new DeepSet([a, b], { transformer }); set.size; // 1 [...set.values()]; // [{ val: 1, other: 2 }]
-
mapValueTransformer
- a custom function that transforms Map values prior to hashing. This is only relevant to the.equals
/.contains
operations from the Comparable interface, as well as the Bi-Directional DeepMap. It does not affect the values that are stored.type MyType = { val: number; other: number }; const a: MyType = { val: 1, other: 1 }; const b: MyType = { val: 1, other: 2 }; const mapValueTransformer = (obj: MyType) => ({ val: obj.val }); const map1 = new DeepMap([[1, a]]); const map2 = new DeepMap([[1, b]]); map1.equals(map2); // false const map1 = new DeepMap([[1, a]], { mapValueTransformer }); const map2 = new DeepMap([[1, b]], { mapValueTransformer }); map1.equals(map2); // true [...map1.entries()]; // [[1, { val: 1, other: 1 }]] [...map2.entries()]; // [[1, { val: 1, other: 2 }]]
-
useToJsonTransform
- if true, only use JSON-serializable properties when computing hashes, equality, etc. (default: false)NOTE: This transform will always be applied BEFORE
transformer
andmapValueTransformer
, if applicable.class A { constructor(public x: number) {} } class B { constructor(public x: number) {} } const a = new A(45); const b = new B(45); const set = new DeepSet([a, b]); set.size; // 2 const set = new DeepSet([a, b], { useToJsonTransform: true }); set.size; // 1
-
caseInsensitive
- If true, all string values--including keys/values within objects and arrays--will be evaluated as case-insensitive. (default: false)NOTE: This transform will always be applied AFTER
transformer
andmapValueTransformer
, if applicable. For objects, it will be applied beforereplacer
(from object-hash options).const a = { key: 'value' }; const b = { key: 'VALUE' }; const set = new DeepSet([a, b]); set.size; // 2 const set = new DeepSet([a, b], { caseInsensitive: true }); set.size; // 1
This library also exposes a BiDirectionalDeepMap
class, which supports O(1) lookups by both keys and values. It provides the following extended API:
hasValue(val: V): boolean
: Returns true ifval
exists as a value in the mapgetKeyByValue(val: V): K | undefined
: Returns the key associated withval
if it existsdeleteByValue(val: V): boolean
: Removes the key-value pair whose value isval
and returns true if found
Note that this "two-way" map has the traditional caveats:
- There is a ~2x memory footprint
- Keys and values must be 1-to-1, meaning each key must have a distinct value and vice versa. This implementation will error if attempting to set a key-value pair whose value is already present in the map with a different key.
areEqual(values, options?)
: Returns true if all elements invalues
are equal. This can be useful when you need to quickly test equality of more than 2 values, or when you want to specify an equality transform (viaoptions.transformer
).
- This still supports primitive keys/values like traditional
Map
/Set
. - Don't mutate objects stored in the data structure. The internal representation is not affected by this mutation, so behavior may be unexpected.
- Don't mutate objects in the user-supplied
transformer
ormapValueTransformer
functions. It will affect the stored version. - This implementation does not explicitly "handle" key collisions. However, with the default algorithm (MD5), even if a map contained one TRILLION entries, the probability of a collision on the next insert is only 0.000000000000001. If you need better odds, use SHA1, SHA256, etc.
Using Github Actions, the CI build will run on all pull requests and pushes/merges to main.
This project uses Conventional Commits and standard-version to facilitate versioning and changelogs.