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A radix tree, or trie, is a data structure optimised for storing key-value pairs in a way optimised for searching. This makes them very, very good for efficiently matching data against keys, and retrieving the values associated with those keys.
triebeard
provides an implementation of tries for R (and
one that can be used in Rcpp development, too, if that’s your thing) so
that useRs can take advantage of the fast, efficient and user-friendly
matching that they allow.
Suppose we have observations in a dataset that are labelled, with a 2-3 letter code that identifies the facility the sample came from:
<- c("AO-1002", "AEO-1004", "AAI-1009", "AFT-1403", "QZ-9065", "QZ-1021", "RF-0901",
labels "AO-1099", "AFT-1101", "QZ-4933")
We know the facility each code maps to, and we want to be able to map the labels to that - not over 10 entries but over hundreds, or thousands, or hundreds of thousands. Tries are a great way of doing that: we treat the codes as keys and the full facility names as values. So let’s make a trie to do this matching, and then, well, match:
library(triebeard)
<- trie(keys = c("AO", "AEO", "AAI", "AFT", "QZ", "RF"),
trie values = c("Audobon", "Atlanta", "Ann Arbor", "Austin", "Queensland", "Raleigh"))
longest_match(trie = trie, to_match = labels)
1] "Audobon" "Atlanta" "Ann Arbor" "Austin" "Queensland" "Queensland" "Raleigh" "Audobon" "Austin"
[10] "Queensland" [
This pulls out, for each label, the trie value where the associated key has the longest prefix-match to the label. We can also just grab all the values where the key starts with, say, A:
prefix_match(trie = trie, to_match = "A")
1]]
[[1] "Ann Arbor" "Atlanta" "Austin" "Audobon" [
And finally if we want we can match very, very fuzzily using “greedy” matching:
greedy_match(trie = trie, to_match = "AO")
1]]
[[1] "Ann Arbor" "Atlanta" "Austin" "Audobon" [
These operations are very, very efficient. If we use longest-match as an example, since that’s the most useful thing, with a one-million element vector of things to match against:
library(triebeard)
library(microbenchmark)
<- trie(keys = c("AO", "AEO", "AAI", "AFT", "QZ", "RF"),
trie values = c("Audobon", "Atlanta", "Ann Arbor", "Austin", "Queensland", "Raleigh"))
<- rep(c("AO-1002", "AEO-1004", "AAI-1009", "AFT-1403", "QZ-9065", "QZ-1021", "RF-0901",
labels "AO-1099", "AFT-1101", "QZ-4933"), 100000)
microbenchmark({longest_match(trie = trie, to_match = labels)})
: milliseconds
Unit
expr min lq mean median uq max nevallongest_match(trie = trie, to_match = labels) } 284.6457 285.5902 289.5342 286.8775 288.4564 327.3878 100 {
I think we can call <300 milliseconds for a million matches against an entire set of possible values pretty fast.
There’s always the possibility that (horror of horrors) you’ll have
to add or remove entries from the trie. Fear not; you can do just that
with trie_add
and trie_remove
respectively,
both of which silently modify the trie they’re provided with to add or
remove whatever key-value pairs you provide:
= "198.0.0.1"
to_match <- trie(keys = "197", values = "fake range")
trie_inst
longest_match(trie_inst, to_match)
1] NA
[
trie_add(trie_inst, keys = "198", values = "home range")
longest_match(trie_inst, to_match)
1] "home range"
[
trie_remove(trie_inst, keys = "198")
longest_match(trie_inst, to_match)
1] NA [
You can also extract information from tries without using them.
dim
, str
, print
and
length
all work for tries, and you can use
get_keys(trie)
and get_values(trie)
to
extract, respectively, the keys and values from a trie object.
In addition, you can also coerce tries into other R data structures, specifically lists and data.frames:
<- trie(keys = c("AO", "AEO", "AAI", "AFT", "QZ", "RF"),
trie values = c("Audobon", "Atlanta", "Ann Arbor", "Austin", "Queensland", "Raleigh"))
str(as.data.frame(trie))
'data.frame': 6 obs. of 2 variables:
$ keys : chr "AAI" "AEO" "AFT" "AO" ...
$ values: chr "Ann Arbor" "Atlanta" "Austin" "Audobon" ...
str(as.list(trie))
2
List of $ keys : chr [1:6] "AAI" "AEO" "AFT" "AO" ...
$ values: chr [1:6] "Ann Arbor" "Atlanta" "Austin" "Audobon" ...
If you have ideas for other trie-like structures, or functions that would be useful with these tries, the best approach is to either request it or add it!
These binaries (installable software) and packages are in development.
They may not be fully stable and should be used with caution. We make no claims about them.
Health stats visible at Monitor.