NAME List::SkipList - Perl implementation of skip lists REQUIREMENTS Perl 5.6.1 is required. The following non-standard modules are required: enum Carp::Assert is no longer required. However, the assertions can be uncommented for debugging. Installation Installation can be done using the traditional Makefile.PL or the newer Build.PL methods. Using Makefile.PL: perl Makefile.PL make make test make install (On Windows platforms you should use nmake instead.) Using Build.PL (if you have Module::Build installed): perl Build.PL perl Build perl Build test perl Build install SYNOPSIS my $list = new List::SkipList(); $list->insert( 'key1', 'value' ); $list->insert( 'key2', 'another value' ); $value = $list->find('key2'); $list->delete('key1'); DESCRIPTION This is an implementation of skip lists in Perl. What are "skip lists"? Skip lists are a probabilistic data structure that seem likely to supplant balanced trees as the implementation method of choice for many applications. Skip list algorithms have the same asymptotic expected time bounds as balanced trees and are simpler, faster and use less space.(*) This implementation may not be faster or use less space, but in superficial testing, it does appear to be a reasonably faster substitute for some pure-Perl tree modules. (However, see the included Benchmark.txt file for comparisons with similar Perl modules, as well as the SEE ALSO section below.) Skip lists are similar to linked lists, except that they have random links at various levels that allow searches to skip over sections of the list, like so: 4 +---------------------------> +----------------------> + | | | 3 +------------> +------------> +-------> +-------> +--> + | | | | | | 2 +-------> +--> +-------> +--> +--> +--> +-------> +--> + | | | | | | | | | 1 +--> +--> +--> +--> +--> +--> +--> +--> +--> +--> +--> + A B C D E F G H I J NIL A search would start at the top level: if the link to the right exceeds the target key, then it descends a level. More information is available in the module documentation. (*) Bill Pugh, inventor of skip lists. Quoted from WikiPedia REVISION HISTORY Changes since v0.63: 0.65 Thu June 3 2004 - updated README 0.64 Thu June 3 2004 - updated examples in documentation of custom node - minor optimizations and code cleanup - commented-out call to prev() in _debug - removed use of Carp::Assert in tests - redesigned benchmark script and included parse-out.pl - updated Benchmark.txt - updated README A detailed revision history is in the Changes file included with this distribution. CAVEATS Skip lists are non-deterministic. Because of this, bugs in programs that use this module may be subtle and difficult to reproduce without many repeated attempts. AUTHOR Robert Rothenberg LICENSE Copyright (c) 2003-2004 Robert Rothenberg. All rights reserved. This program is free software; you can redistribute it and/or modify it under the same terms as Perl itself. SEE ALSO See the article "A Skip List Cookbook" (William Pugh, 1989), or similar ones by the author at http://www.cs.umd.edu/~pugh/ which discuss skip lists. Because of the way Perl manages memory, you may be better off using a hash with sorted keys (such as Tie::Hash::Sorted) rather than maintaining a sorted dictionary using this or similar modules.