| // Copyright (c) 2013, the Dart project authors. Please see the AUTHORS file |
| // for details. All rights reserved. Use of this source code is governed by a |
| // BSD-style license that can be found in the LICENSE file. |
| |
| part of dart.collection; |
| |
| /** |
| * A [LinkedHashSet] is a hash-table based [Set] implementation. |
| * |
| * The `LinkedHashSet` also keep track of the order that elements were inserted |
| * in, and iteration happens in first-to-last insertion order. |
| * |
| * The elements of a `LinkedHashSet` must have consistent [Object.operator==] |
| * and [Object.hashCode] implementations. This means that the `==` operator |
| * must define a stable equivalence relation on the elements (reflexive, |
| * symmetric, transitive, and consistent over time), and that `hashCode` |
| * must be the same for objects that are considered equal by `==`. |
| * |
| * The set allows `null` as an element. |
| * |
| * Iteration of elements is done in element insertion order. |
| * An element that was added after another will occur later in the iteration. |
| * Adding an element that is already in the set |
| * does not change its position in the iteration order, |
| * but removing an element and adding it again, |
| * will make it the last element of an iteration. |
| * |
| * Most simple operations on `HashSet` are done in (potentially amortized) |
| * constant time: [add], [contains], [remove], and [length], provided the hash |
| * codes of objects are well distributed.. |
| */ |
| abstract class LinkedHashSet<E> implements HashSet<E> { |
| /** |
| * Create an insertion-ordered hash set using the provided |
| * [equals] and [hashCode]. |
| * |
| * The provided [equals] must define a stable equivalence relation, and |
| * [hashCode] must be consistent with [equals]. If the [equals] or [hashCode] |
| * methods won't work on all objects, but only on some instances of E, the |
| * [isValidKey] predicate can be used to restrict the keys that the functions |
| * are applied to. |
| * Any key for which [isValidKey] returns false is automatically assumed |
| * to not be in the set when asking `contains`. |
| * |
| * If [equals] or [hashCode] are omitted, the set uses |
| * the elements' intrinsic [Object.operator==] and [Object.hashCode], |
| * and [isValidKey] is ignored since these operations are assumed |
| * to work on all objects. |
| * |
| * If you supply one of [equals] and [hashCode], |
| * you should generally also to supply the other. |
| * |
| * If the supplied `equals` or `hashCode` functions won't work on all [E] |
| * objects, and the map will be used in a setting where a non-`E` object |
| * is passed to, e.g., `contains`, then the [isValidKey] function should |
| * also be supplied. |
| * |
| * If [isValidKey] is omitted, it defaults to testing if the object is an |
| * [E] instance. That means that: |
| * |
| * new LinkedHashSet<int>(equals: (int e1, int e2) => (e1 - e2) % 5 == 0, |
| * hashCode: (int e) => e % 5) |
| * |
| * does not need an `isValidKey` argument, because it defaults to only |
| * accepting `int` values which are accepted by both `equals` and `hashCode`. |
| * |
| * If neither `equals`, `hashCode`, nor `isValidKey` is provided, |
| * the default `isValidKey` instead accepts all values. |
| * The default equality and hashcode operations are assumed to work on all |
| * objects. |
| * |
| * Likewise, if `equals` is [identical], `hashCode` is [identityHashCode] |
| * and `isValidKey` is omitted, the resulting set is identity based, |
| * and the `isValidKey` defaults to accepting all keys. |
| * Such a map can be created directly using [LinkedHashSet.identity]. |
| */ |
| external factory LinkedHashSet({bool equals(E e1, E e2), |
| int hashCode(E e), |
| bool isValidKey(potentialKey)}); |
| |
| /** |
| * Creates an insertion-ordered identity-based set. |
| * |
| * Effectively a shorthand for: |
| * |
| * new LinkedHashSet(equals: identical, |
| * hashCode: identityHashCodeOf) |
| */ |
| external factory LinkedHashSet.identity(); |
| |
| /** |
| * Create a linked hash set containing all [elements]. |
| * |
| * Creates a linked hash set as by `new LinkedHashSet<E>()` and adds each |
| * element of`elements` to this set in the order they are iterated. |
| * |
| * All the [elements] should be assignable to [E]. |
| * The `elements` iterable itself may have any element type, |
| * so this constructor can be used to down-cast a `Set`, for example as: |
| * |
| * Set<SuperType> superSet = ...; |
| * Iterable<SuperType> tmp = superSet.where((e) => e is SubType); |
| * Set<SubType> subSet = new LinkedHashSet<SubType>.from(tmp); |
| */ |
| factory LinkedHashSet.from(Iterable<E> elements) { |
| LinkedHashSet<E> result = new LinkedHashSet<E>(); |
| for (final E element in elements) { |
| result.add(element); |
| } |
| return result; |
| } |
| |
| /** |
| * Executes a function on each element of the set. |
| * |
| * The elements are iterated in insertion order. |
| */ |
| void forEach(void action(E element)); |
| |
| /** |
| * Provides an iterator that iterates over the elements in insertion order. |
| */ |
| Iterator<E> get iterator; |
| } |