Expand description
§relmath
relmath is the library crate inside the relmath-rs repository.
It provides exact finite relations with deterministic BTreeSet-backed
iteration order.
§Current Surface
The current public API covers:
UnaryRelation<T>for finite unary relations (sets)BinaryRelation<A, B>for finite binary relationsGroupedRelation<T>for deterministic exact grouped n-ary outputNaryRelation<T>for deterministic schema-aware exact n-ary relations- schema validation with explicit n-ary relation errors
- named-column inspection with zero-based
column_index - std-only named-row onboarding and export with
BTreeMap - union, intersection, and difference
- domain, range, converse, and composition
- domain/range restriction plus image/preimage with unary relations
- identity on a carrier
- transitive and reflexive-transitive closure on homogeneous relations
- relation property checks for reflexivity, irreflexivity, symmetry, antisymmetry, transitivity, equivalence, and partial order
- n-ary schema inspection, row insertion, deterministic iteration, selection, projection, rename, natural join, and schema-compatible set algebra
Composition uses relational order:
r.compose(&s)meansr ; s- the result contains
(a, c)when somebsatisfies(a, b) in rand(b, c) in s
§Current Limits
This crate currently implements the exact G1 core plus the first narrow G2 foundation:
- natural join plus exact keyed grouping with row counts have landed so far; broader join families, richer aggregation, and division are still later work
- no typed row derives or schema macros yet
- no weighted or temporal relations
- no solver-backed or symbolic evaluation
The repository ships focused examples under examples/:
familyfor ancestry and reachabilityaccess_controlfor role-permission propagationworkflowfor state reachabilitycurriculumfor schema-aware n-ary filtering and projection
§N-ary Row Algebra Notes
selectkeeps the existing schema and preserves deterministic order among surviving rowsprojectfollows the requested column order exactlyprojectcurrently rejects empty projections and duplicate projected columnsrenameis a no-op when the source and target names are the sameunion,intersection, anddifferencerequire exact schema equality, including column order
§N-ary Interchange Notes
- the current G2 interchange boundary is std-only and dependency-free
from_named_rowsloadsBTreeMaprecords into an explicit schemato_named_rowsexports name-addressableBTreeMaprecords in deterministic row order- missing and unexpected columns are rejected explicitly
- serde, JSON, and CSV / TSV onboarding remain later feature-gated work
§N-ary Join Notes
natural_joinmatches rows when every shared column has equal values- when two schemas are disjoint,
natural_joinbehaves as a cartesian product - the output schema keeps the entire left schema, then appends right-only columns in their original order
- output row order stays deterministic because rows are materialized into a
BTreeSet - if no rows match, the result is empty but still carries the joined schema
§N-ary Grouping Notes
group_byuses explicit key columns in the requested ordergroup(key)returns the member relation for one exact grouping key- empty grouping keys are currently rejected by the exact core
- each member group keeps the original relation schema in this first slice
- group iteration order is deterministic by key
countsis the first exact aggregate and returns the number of stored rows in each group after relation deduplication
§Example
use std::collections::BTreeMap;
use relmath::NaryRelation;
let completed = NaryRelation::from_named_rows(
["student", "course"],
[
BTreeMap::from([("course", "Math"), ("student", "Alice")]),
BTreeMap::from([("course", "Physics"), ("student", "Alice")]),
BTreeMap::from([("course", "Math"), ("student", "Bob")]),
],
)?;
let rooms = NaryRelation::from_named_rows(
["course", "room"],
[
BTreeMap::from([("course", "Math"), ("room", "R101")]),
BTreeMap::from([("course", "Physics"), ("room", "R201")]),
],
)?;
let scheduled = completed.natural_join(&rooms);
let by_room = scheduled.group_by(["room"])?;
assert_eq!(
scheduled.schema(),
&["student".to_string(), "course".to_string(), "room".to_string()]
);
assert_eq!(by_room.counts(), vec![(vec!["R101"], 2), (vec!["R201"], 1)]);
assert_eq!(
scheduled.to_rows(),
vec![
vec!["Alice", "Math", "R101"],
vec!["Alice", "Physics", "R201"],
vec!["Bob", "Math", "R101"],
]
);§Status
This crate now contains the published G1 unary/binary core plus the first schema-aware n-ary building block for G2, including stricter schema validation for blank column names, a std-only named-row interchange boundary, an exact natural join primitive, and exact keyed grouping with row counts.
Re-exports§
pub use crate::core::BinaryRelation;pub use crate::core::GroupedRelation;pub use crate::core::NaryRelation;pub use crate::core::NaryRelationError;pub use crate::core::UnaryRelation;pub use crate::traits::FiniteRelation;