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Contains a variety of ordered structures, in particular a SkipList.

Project description

SkipList

This project contains a SkipList implementation in C++ with Python bindings.

A SkipList behaves as an always sorted list with, typically, O(log(n)) cost for insertion, look-up and removal. This makes it ideal for such operations as computing the rolling median of a large dataset.

See the full documentation on this project at ReadTheDocs.

A SkipList is implemented as a singly linked list of ordered nodes where each node participates in a subset of, sparser, linked lists. These additional 'sparse' linked lists provide rapid indexing and mutation of the underlying linked list. It is a probabilistic data structure using a random function to determine how many 'sparse' linked lists any particular node participates in. As such SkipList is an alternative to binary tree, Wikipedia has a introductory page on SkipLists.

An advantage claimed for SkipLists are that the insert and remove logic is simpler (however I do not subscribe to this). The drawbacks of a SkipList include its larger space requirements and its O(log(N)) lookup behaviour compared to other, more restricted and specialised, data structures that may have either faster runtime behaviour or lower space requirements or both.

This project contains a SkipList implementation in C++ with Python bindings with:

  • No capacity restrictions apart from available memory.
  • Works with any C++ type that has meaningful comparison operators.
  • The C++ SkipList can be compiled as thread safe.
  • The Python SkipList is thread safe.
  • The SkipList has exhaustive internal integrity checks.
  • Python SkipLists can be long/float/bytes/object types, the latter can have user defined comparison functions.
  • With Python 3.8+ SkipLists can be combined with the multiprocessing.shared_memory module for concurrent operation on large arrays. For example concurrent rolling medians which speed up near linearly with the number of cores.
  • The implementation is extensively performance tested in C++ and Python.

There are a some novel features to this implementation:

Credits

Originally written by Paul Ross with credits to: Wilfred Hughes (AHL), Luke Sewell (AHL) and Terry Tsantagoeds (AHL).

Installation

C++

This SkipList requires:

  • A C++20 compiler.
  • -I<skiplist>/src/cpp as an include path.
  • <skiplist>/src/cpp/SkipList.cpp to be compiled/linked.
  • The macro SKIPLIST_THREAD_SUPPORT set if you want a thread safe SkipList using C++ mutexes.

Python

This SkipList version supports Python 3.10, 3.11, 3.12, 3.13, 3.14 (and, probably, some earlier Python 3 versions).

From PyPi

$ pip install orderedstructs

From source

$ git clone https://github.com/paulross/skiplist.git
$ cd <skiplist>
$ python setup.py install

Testing

This SkipList has extensive tests for correctness and performance.

C++

To run all the C++ functional and performance tests:

$ cd <skiplist>/src/cpp
$ make release
$ ./SkipList_R.exe

To run the C++ functional tests with agressive internal integrity checks:

$ cd <skiplist>/src/cpp
$ make debug
$ ./SkipList_D.exe

To run all the C++ functional and performance tests for a thread safe SkipList:

$ cd <skiplist>/src/cpp
$ make release CXXFLAGS=-DSKIPLIST_THREAD_SUPPORT
$ ./SkipList_R.exe

Python

Testing requires pytest and hypothesis:

To run all the C++ functional and performance tests:

$ cd <skiplist>
$ py.test -vs tests/

Examples

Here are some examples of using a SkipList in your code:

C++

#include "SkipList.h"
    
// Declare with any type that has sane comparison.
OrderedStructs::SkipList::HeadNode<double> sl;

sl.insert(42.0);
sl.insert(21.0);
sl.insert(84.0);

sl.has(42.0) // true
sl.size()    // 3
sl.at(1)     // 42.0, throws OrderedStructs::SkipList::IndexError if index out of range

sl.remove(21.0); // throws OrderedStructs::SkipList::ValueError if value not present

sl.size()    // 2
sl.at(1)     // 84.0

The C++ SkipList is thread safe when compiled with the macro SKIPLIST_THREAD_SUPPORT, then a SkipList can then be shared across threads:

#include <thread>
#include <vector>

#include "SkipList.h"

void do_something(OrderedStructs::SkipList::HeadNode<double> *pSkipList) {
    // Insert/remove items into *pSkipList
    // Read items inserted by other threads.
}

OrderedStructs::SkipList::HeadNode<double> sl;
std::vector<std::thread> threads;

for (size_t i = 0; i < thread_count; ++i) {
    threads.push_back(std::thread(do_something, &sl));
}
for (auto &t: threads) {
    t.join();
}
// The SkipList now contains the totality of the thread actions.

Python

An example of using a SkipList of always ordered floats:

import orderedstructs

# Declare with a type. Supported types are long/float/bytes/object.
sl = orderedstructs.SkipList(float)

sl.insert(42.0)
sl.insert(21.0)
sl.insert(84.0)

sl.has(42.0) # True
sl.size()    # 3
sl.at(1)     # 42.0

sl.has(42.0) # True
sl.size()    # 3
sl.at(1)     # 42.0, raises IndexError if index out of range

sl.remove(21.0); # raises ValueError if value not present

sl.size()    # 2
sl.at(1)     # 84.0

The Python SkipList can be used with user defined objects with a user defined sort order. In this example the last name of the person takes precedence over the first name:

import functools

@functools.total_ordering
class Person:
    """Simple example of ordering based on last name/first name."""
    def __init__(self, first_name, last_name):
        self.first_name = first_name
        self.last_name = last_name

    def __eq__(self, other):
        try:
            return self.last_name == other.last_name and self.first_name == other.first_name
        except AttributeError:
            return NotImplemented

    def __lt__(self, other):
        try:
            return self.last_name < other.last_name or self.first_name < other.first_name
        except AttributeError:
            return NotImplemented

    def __str__(self):
        return '{}, {}'.format(self.last_name, self.first_name)

import orderedstructs

sl = orderedstructs.SkipList(object)

sl.insert(Person('Peter', 'Pan'))
sl.insert(Person('Alan', 'Pan'))
assert sl.size() == 2
assert str(sl.at(0)) == 'Pan, Alan' 
assert str(sl.at(1)) == 'Pan, Peter' 

The Python SkipList is thread safe when using any acceptable Python type even if that type has user defined comparison methods. This uses Pythons mutex machinery which is independent of C++ mutexes.

History

0.4.0 (2026-01-31)

  • Support for Python 3.10, 3.11, 3.12, 3.13, 3.14.
  • End support for Python 3.8, 3.9 but they will work just fine.
  • Improve the performance tests and documentation.
  • Python performance benchmarks are now automatically converted into Gnuplot .dat files.
  • Improve C++ rolling median code.
  • Reorganise C++ header files to be more conventional which also gives Doxygen a better grasp of the code.
  • Development Status :: 5 - Production/Stable

0.3.17 (2026-01-21)

  • Support for Python 3.8, 3.9, 3.10, 3.11, 3.12, 3.13, 3.14.
  • Development Status :: 5 - Production/Stable

0.3.16 (2025-04-12)

  • Improvements to performance documentation.
  • Minor fix for a linker issue.
  • Support for Python 3.8, 3.9, 3.10, 3.11, 3.12, 3.13.
  • Development Status :: 5 - Production/Stable

0.3.15 (2025-02-12)

0.3.14 (2024-08-02)

  • Support for Python 3.8, 3.9, 3.10, 3.11, 3.12, 3.13.
  • Drop support for Python 3.7.

0.3.13 (2023-09-05)

  • Documentation improvements.

0.3.12 (2023-08-29)

  • Minor fixes to the documentation and examples.

0.3.11 (2023-08-28)

  • Minor fixes missed in 0.3.10 release.

0.3.10 (2023-08-28)

  • Minor fixes missed in 0.3.9 release.

0.3.9 (2023-08-28)

  • Minor fixes missed in 0.3.8 release.

0.3.8 (2023-08-28)

  • Add cmake build.
  • Support for Python 3.7, 3.8, 3.9, 3.10, 3.11.
  • Remove mention of Python 2.

0.3.7 (2021-12-18)

  • Fix build on GCC (Issue #8).

0.3.6 (2021-12-18)

  • Add documentation on NaN in rolling median.
  • Add plots using shared_memory.
  • Add Python 3.10 support.

0.3.5 (2021-05-02)

  • Fix uncaught exception when trying to remove a NaN.

0.3.4 (2021-04-28)

  • Improve documentation mainly around multiprocessing.shared_memory and tests.

0.3.3 (2021-03-25)

  • Add Python benchmarks, fix some build issues.

0.3.2 (2021-03-18)

  • Fix lambda issues with Python 3.8, 3.9.

0.3.1 (2021-03-17)

  • Support Python 3.7, 3.8, 3.9.

0.3.0 (2017-08-18)

  • Public release.
  • Allows storing of PyObject* and rich comparison.

0.2.0

Python module now named orderedstructs.

0.1.0

Initial release.

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