Struct unc_sdk::store::iterable_set::IterableSet
source · pub struct IterableSet<T, H = Sha256>{ /* private fields */ }Expand description
A lazily loaded storage set that stores its content directly on the storage trie.
This structure is similar to unc_sdk::store::LookupSet, except
that it keeps track of the elements so that IterableSet can be iterable among other things.
As with the LookupSet type, an IterableSet requires that the elements
implement the BorshSerialize and Ord traits. This can frequently be achieved by
using #[derive(BorshSerialize, Ord)]. Some functions also require elements to implement the
BorshDeserialize trait.
This set stores the values under a hash of the set’s prefix and BorshSerialize of the
element using the set’s ToKey implementation.
The default hash function for IterableSet is Sha256 which uses a syscall
(or host function) built into the UNC runtime to hash the element. To use a custom function,
use with_hasher. Alternative builtin hash functions can be found at
unc_sdk::store::key.
§Examples
use unc_sdk::store::IterableSet;
// Initializes a set, the generic types can be inferred to `IterableSet<String, Sha256>`
// The `b"a"` parameter is a prefix for the storage keys of this data structure.
let mut set = IterableSet::new(b"a");
set.insert("test".to_string());
assert!(set.contains("test"));
assert!(set.remove("test"));IterableSet also implements various binary operations, which allow
for iterating various combinations of two sets.
use unc_sdk::store::IterableSet;
use std::collections::HashSet;
let mut set1 = IterableSet::new(b"m");
set1.insert(1);
set1.insert(2);
set1.insert(3);
let mut set2 = IterableSet::new(b"n");
set2.insert(2);
set2.insert(3);
set2.insert(4);
assert_eq!(
set1.union(&set2).collect::<HashSet<_>>(),
[1, 2, 3, 4].iter().collect()
);
assert_eq!(
set1.intersection(&set2).collect::<HashSet<_>>(),
[2, 3].iter().collect()
);
assert_eq!(
set1.difference(&set2).collect::<HashSet<_>>(),
[1].iter().collect()
);
assert_eq!(
set1.symmetric_difference(&set2).collect::<HashSet<_>>(),
[1, 4].iter().collect()
);Implementations§
source§impl<T> IterableSet<T, Sha256>where
T: BorshSerialize + Ord,
impl<T> IterableSet<T, Sha256>where
T: BorshSerialize + Ord,
sourcepub fn new<S>(prefix: S) -> Selfwhere
S: IntoStorageKey,
pub fn new<S>(prefix: S) -> Selfwhere
S: IntoStorageKey,
Create a new iterable set. Use prefix as a unique prefix for keys.
This prefix can be anything that implements IntoStorageKey. The prefix is used when
storing and looking up values in storage to ensure no collisions with other collections.
§Examples
use unc_sdk::store::IterableSet;
let mut map: IterableSet<String> = IterableSet::new(b"b");source§impl<T, H> IterableSet<T, H>
impl<T, H> IterableSet<T, H>
sourcepub fn with_hasher<S>(prefix: S) -> Selfwhere
S: IntoStorageKey,
pub fn with_hasher<S>(prefix: S) -> Selfwhere
S: IntoStorageKey,
Initialize a IterableSet with a custom hash function.
§Example
use unc_sdk::store::key::Keccak256;
use unc_sdk::store::IterableSet;
let map = IterableSet::<String, Keccak256>::with_hasher(b"m");sourcepub fn clear(&mut self)where
T: BorshDeserialize + Clone,
pub fn clear(&mut self)where
T: BorshDeserialize + Clone,
Clears the set, removing all values.
sourcepub fn difference<'a>(
&'a self,
other: &'a IterableSet<T, H>,
) -> Difference<'a, T, H> ⓘwhere
T: BorshDeserialize,
pub fn difference<'a>(
&'a self,
other: &'a IterableSet<T, H>,
) -> Difference<'a, T, H> ⓘwhere
T: BorshDeserialize,
Visits the values representing the difference, i.e., the values that are in self but not
in other.
§Examples
use unc_sdk::store::IterableSet;
let mut set1 = IterableSet::new(b"m");
set1.insert("a".to_string());
set1.insert("b".to_string());
set1.insert("c".to_string());
let mut set2 = IterableSet::new(b"n");
set2.insert("b".to_string());
set2.insert("c".to_string());
set2.insert("d".to_string());
// Can be seen as `set1 - set2`.
for x in set1.difference(&set2) {
println!("{}", x); // Prints "a"
}sourcepub fn symmetric_difference<'a>(
&'a self,
other: &'a IterableSet<T, H>,
) -> SymmetricDifference<'a, T, H> ⓘwhere
T: BorshDeserialize + Clone,
pub fn symmetric_difference<'a>(
&'a self,
other: &'a IterableSet<T, H>,
) -> SymmetricDifference<'a, T, H> ⓘwhere
T: BorshDeserialize + Clone,
Visits the values representing the symmetric difference, i.e., the values that are in
self or in other but not in both.
§Examples
use unc_sdk::store::IterableSet;
let mut set1 = IterableSet::new(b"m");
set1.insert("a".to_string());
set1.insert("b".to_string());
set1.insert("c".to_string());
let mut set2 = IterableSet::new(b"n");
set2.insert("b".to_string());
set2.insert("c".to_string());
set2.insert("d".to_string());
// Prints "a", "d" in arbitrary order.
for x in set1.symmetric_difference(&set2) {
println!("{}", x);
}sourcepub fn intersection<'a>(
&'a self,
other: &'a IterableSet<T, H>,
) -> Intersection<'a, T, H> ⓘwhere
T: BorshDeserialize,
pub fn intersection<'a>(
&'a self,
other: &'a IterableSet<T, H>,
) -> Intersection<'a, T, H> ⓘwhere
T: BorshDeserialize,
Visits the values representing the intersection, i.e., the values that are both in self
and other.
§Examples
use unc_sdk::store::IterableSet;
let mut set1 = IterableSet::new(b"m");
set1.insert("a".to_string());
set1.insert("b".to_string());
set1.insert("c".to_string());
let mut set2 = IterableSet::new(b"n");
set2.insert("b".to_string());
set2.insert("c".to_string());
set2.insert("d".to_string());
// Prints "b", "c" in arbitrary order.
for x in set1.intersection(&set2) {
println!("{}", x);
}sourcepub fn union<'a>(&'a self, other: &'a IterableSet<T, H>) -> Union<'a, T, H> ⓘwhere
T: BorshDeserialize + Clone,
pub fn union<'a>(&'a self, other: &'a IterableSet<T, H>) -> Union<'a, T, H> ⓘwhere
T: BorshDeserialize + Clone,
Visits the values representing the union, i.e., all the values in self or other, without
duplicates.
§Examples
use unc_sdk::store::IterableSet;
let mut set1 = IterableSet::new(b"m");
set1.insert("a".to_string());
set1.insert("b".to_string());
set1.insert("c".to_string());
let mut set2 = IterableSet::new(b"n");
set2.insert("b".to_string());
set2.insert("c".to_string());
set2.insert("d".to_string());
// Prints "a", "b", "c", "d" in arbitrary order.
for x in set1.union(&set2) {
println!("{}", x);
}sourcepub fn is_disjoint(&self, other: &IterableSet<T, H>) -> boolwhere
T: BorshDeserialize + Clone,
pub fn is_disjoint(&self, other: &IterableSet<T, H>) -> boolwhere
T: BorshDeserialize + Clone,
Returns true if self has no elements in common with other. This is equivalent to
checking for an empty intersection.
§Examples
use unc_sdk::store::IterableSet;
let mut set1 = IterableSet::new(b"m");
set1.insert("a".to_string());
set1.insert("b".to_string());
set1.insert("c".to_string());
let mut set2 = IterableSet::new(b"n");
assert_eq!(set1.is_disjoint(&set2), true);
set2.insert("d".to_string());
assert_eq!(set1.is_disjoint(&set2), true);
set2.insert("a".to_string());
assert_eq!(set1.is_disjoint(&set2), false);sourcepub fn is_subset(&self, other: &IterableSet<T, H>) -> boolwhere
T: BorshDeserialize + Clone,
pub fn is_subset(&self, other: &IterableSet<T, H>) -> boolwhere
T: BorshDeserialize + Clone,
Returns true if the set is a subset of another, i.e., other contains at least all the
values in self.
§Examples
use unc_sdk::store::IterableSet;
let mut sup = IterableSet::new(b"m");
sup.insert("a".to_string());
sup.insert("b".to_string());
sup.insert("c".to_string());
let mut set = IterableSet::new(b"n");
assert_eq!(set.is_subset(&sup), true);
set.insert("b".to_string());
assert_eq!(set.is_subset(&sup), true);
set.insert("d".to_string());
assert_eq!(set.is_subset(&sup), false);sourcepub fn is_superset(&self, other: &IterableSet<T, H>) -> boolwhere
T: BorshDeserialize + Clone,
pub fn is_superset(&self, other: &IterableSet<T, H>) -> boolwhere
T: BorshDeserialize + Clone,
Returns true if the set is a superset of another, i.e., self contains at least all the
values in other.
§Examples
use unc_sdk::store::IterableSet;
let mut sub = IterableSet::new(b"m");
sub.insert("a".to_string());
sub.insert("b".to_string());
let mut set = IterableSet::new(b"n");
assert_eq!(set.is_superset(&sub), false);
set.insert("b".to_string());
set.insert("d".to_string());
assert_eq!(set.is_superset(&sub), false);
set.insert("a".to_string());
assert_eq!(set.is_superset(&sub), true);sourcepub fn iter(&self) -> Iter<'_, T> ⓘwhere
T: BorshDeserialize,
pub fn iter(&self) -> Iter<'_, T> ⓘwhere
T: BorshDeserialize,
An iterator visiting all elements in arbitrary order.
The iterator element type is &'a T.
§Examples
use unc_sdk::store::IterableSet;
let mut set = IterableSet::new(b"m");
set.insert("a".to_string());
set.insert("b".to_string());
set.insert("c".to_string());
for val in set.iter() {
println!("val: {}", val);
}sourcepub fn drain(&mut self) -> Drain<'_, T, H> ⓘwhere
T: BorshDeserialize,
pub fn drain(&mut self) -> Drain<'_, T, H> ⓘwhere
T: BorshDeserialize,
Clears the set, returning all elements in an iterator.
§Examples
use unc_sdk::store::IterableSet;
let mut a = IterableSet::new(b"m");
a.insert(1);
a.insert(2);
for v in a.drain().take(1) {
assert!(v == 1 || v == 2);
}
assert!(a.is_empty());sourcepub fn contains<Q>(&self, value: &Q) -> bool
pub fn contains<Q>(&self, value: &Q) -> bool
Returns true if the set contains the specified value.
The value may be any borrowed form of the set’s value type, but
BorshSerialize, ToOwned<Owned = T> and Ord on the borrowed form must
match those for the value type.
sourcepub fn insert(&mut self, value: T) -> boolwhere
T: Clone + BorshDeserialize,
pub fn insert(&mut self, value: T) -> boolwhere
T: Clone + BorshDeserialize,
Adds a value to the set.
If the set did not have this value present, true is returned.
If the set did have this value present, false is returned.
sourcepub fn remove<Q>(&mut self, value: &Q) -> boolwhere
T: Borrow<Q> + BorshDeserialize + Clone,
Q: BorshSerialize + ToOwned<Owned = T> + Ord + ?Sized,
pub fn remove<Q>(&mut self, value: &Q) -> boolwhere
T: Borrow<Q> + BorshDeserialize + Clone,
Q: BorshSerialize + ToOwned<Owned = T> + Ord + ?Sized,
Removes a value from the set. Returns whether the value was present in the set.
The value may be any borrowed form of the set’s value type, but
BorshSerialize, ToOwned<Owned = K> and Ord on the borrowed form must
match those for the value type.
§Performance
When elements are removed, the underlying vector of keys is rearranged by means of swapping
an obsolete key with the last element in the list and deleting that. Note that that requires
updating the index map due to the fact that it holds elements vector indices.
Trait Implementations§
source§impl<T, H> BorshDeserialize for IterableSet<T, H>
impl<T, H> BorshDeserialize for IterableSet<T, H>
fn deserialize_reader<R: Read>(reader: &mut R) -> Result<Self, Error>
source§fn deserialize(buf: &mut &[u8]) -> Result<Self, Error>
fn deserialize(buf: &mut &[u8]) -> Result<Self, Error>
source§fn try_from_slice(v: &[u8]) -> Result<Self, Error>
fn try_from_slice(v: &[u8]) -> Result<Self, Error>
fn try_from_reader<R>(reader: &mut R) -> Result<Self, Error>where
R: Read,
source§impl<T, H> BorshSerialize for IterableSet<T, H>
impl<T, H> BorshSerialize for IterableSet<T, H>
source§impl<T, H> Debug for IterableSet<T, H>
impl<T, H> Debug for IterableSet<T, H>
source§impl<T, H> Drop for IterableSet<T, H>
impl<T, H> Drop for IterableSet<T, H>
source§impl<T, H> Extend<T> for IterableSet<T, H>
impl<T, H> Extend<T> for IterableSet<T, H>
source§fn extend<I>(&mut self, iter: I)where
I: IntoIterator<Item = T>,
fn extend<I>(&mut self, iter: I)where
I: IntoIterator<Item = T>,
source§fn extend_one(&mut self, item: A)
fn extend_one(&mut self, item: A)
extend_one)source§fn extend_reserve(&mut self, additional: usize)
fn extend_reserve(&mut self, additional: usize)
extend_one)