TryOmar's blog

By TryOmar, 12 months ago, In English

Ordered Sets in C++

In C++, ordered sets can be created using special code templates.

#include <ext/pb_ds/assoc_container.hpp>
#include <ext/pb_ds/tree_policy.hpp>
using namespace __gnu_pbds;

template<class T> using ordered_set = tree<T, null_type, less<T>, rb_tree_tag, tree_order_statistics_node_update>;


template<class T> using ordered_multiset = tree<T, null_type, less_equal<T>, rb_tree_tag, tree_order_statistics_node_update>;

Two primary structures are introduced:

  • ordered_set maintains sorted unique elements in ascending order using less comparison.

  • ordered_multiset allows duplicates using a less_equal comparison, preserving the sorted order.

Fucntions

In addition to normal set operations, the ordered set supports:

  • order_of_key(k): Gives the count of elements smaller than k. — O(log n)
  • find_by_order(k): Returns the iterator for the kth element (use k = 0 for the first element). — O(log n)

Deletion in Multiset

To remove an element in a multiset, you must delete it using iterators:

ss.erase(ss.find_by_order(ss.order_of_key(x)));

Simple Usecase

#include <iostream>
#include <ext/pb_ds/assoc_container.hpp>
#include <ext/pb_ds/tree_policy.hpp>
using namespace std;
using namespace __gnu_pbds;

template<class T> using ordered_multiset = tree<T, null_type, less_equal<T>, rb_tree_tag, tree_order_statistics_node_update>;

int main() {
    // Declaration of ordered_multiset as 'ss'
    ordered_multiset<int> ss;

    // Inserting elements into 'ss'
    ss.insert(5);
    ss.insert(2);
    ss.insert(7);
    ss.insert(2); // Allows duplicates
    ss.insert(1);



    // Displaying elements 
    cout << "Elements in the ordered_multiset: ";
    for (auto it : ss) { // 1 2 2 5 7
        cout << it << " ";
    }
    cout << endl;

    // Counting elements less than 5 using order_of_key
    cout << "Elements less than 5: " << ss.order_of_key(5) << endl; // 3

    // Deleting an element, e.g., deleting value 2
    auto it = ss.find_by_order(ss.order_of_key(2)); // Find iterator to the element 2
    if (it != ss.end()) {
        ss.erase(it); // Erase the found element O(log n)
        cout << "Element 2 removed from the ordered_multiset." << endl;
    } else {
        cout << "Element not found in the ordered_multiset." << endl;
    }

    return 0;
}

Sorting Descending (or Equal)

This modification greater allows sorting elements in descending order for set or multiset.

template<class T> using ordered_set = tree<T, null_type, greater<T>, rb_tree_tag, tree_order_statistics_node_update>;

template<class T> using ordered_multiset = tree<T, null_type, greater_equal<T>, rb_tree_tag, tree_order_statistics_node_update>;

Operator Overload

The custom comparison operator is used for handling duplicates within an ordered multiset. It ensures that duplicate elements are retained while maintaining the desired sorting order based on the specified comparison logic.

template<class T>
struct custom_compare {
    bool operator()(const T& a, const T& b) const {
        if (a == b) return true; // Keep duplicates
        return a > b;
    }
};

template<class T> using ordered_multiset = tree<T, null_type, custom_compare<T>, rb_tree_tag, tree_order_statistics_node_update>;

You can modify the operator to sort based on anything you want, for example, based on the frequency of each element you would return fr[a] < fr[b];.

Also, you can check my article on sorting in normal sets/multisets here: Custom Sorting in Normal Sets/Multisets

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12 months ago, # |
Rev. 2   Vote: I like it +15 Vote: I do not like it

You can't use ordered_set as ordered_multiset.

Read this

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12 months ago, # |
  Vote: I like it 0 Vote: I do not like it

oh wow... I didn't know that if you replace less with less_equal, you turn a set into a multiset.

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12 months ago, # |
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I think ss.find_by_order(ss.order_of_key(x)) can be replaced with ss.lower_bound(x)

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12 months ago, # |
  Vote: I like it +1 Vote: I do not like it

Note that in order for lower_bound to work you can use an ordered sait of pairs, where the first number is the value and the second an index or something similar. then when you search you only have to use -INF or INF as the second value in the pair

»
12 months ago, # |
Rev. 2   Vote: I like it 0 Vote: I do not like it

I guess mentioning ordered_map would be relevant here...

template<class key,class value,class cmp=less<key>> using ordered_map = tree <key,value, cmp, rb_tree_tag, tree_order_statistics_node_update>;
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12 months ago, # |
  Vote: I like it +6 Vote: I do not like it

Alarm! The actual rating of the author is 1287