On this page:
make-interval-map
interval-map?
interval-map-ref
interval-map-ref/  bounds
interval-map-set!
interval-map-update*!
interval-map-remove!
interval-map-contract!
interval-map-expand!
interval-map-cons*!
interval-map-iterate-first
interval-map-iterate-next
interval-map-iterate-key
interval-map-iterate-value
interval-map-iter?
7.9.0.4

6 Interval Maps

Ryan Culpepper <ryanc@racket-lang.org>

 (require data/interval-map) package: data-lib

An interval-map is a mutable data structure that maps half-open intervals of exact integers to values. An interval-map is queried at a discrete point, and the result of the query is the value mapped to the interval containing the point.

Internally, interval-maps use a skip-list (data/skip-list) of intervals for efficient query and update, including efficient contraction and expansion of intervals.

Interval-maps implement the dictionary (racket/dict) interface to a limited extent. Only dict-ref and the iteration-based methods (dict-iterate-first, dict-map, etc) are supported. For the iteration-based methods, the mapping’s keys are considered the pairs of the start and end positions of the mapping’s (half-open) intervals.

Examples:
> (define r (make-interval-map))
> (interval-map-set! r 1 5 'apple)
> (interval-map-set! r 6 10 'pear)
> (interval-map-set! r 3 7 'banana)
> r

(make-interval-map '(((1 . 3) . apple) ((3 . 7) . banana) ((7 . 10) . pear)))

> (interval-map-ref r 1 #f)

'apple

> (interval-map-ref r 3 #f)

'banana

> (interval-map-ref r 10 #f)

#f

Operations on interval-maps are not thread-safe.

procedure

(make-interval-map [contents 
  #:key-contract key-contract 
  #:value-contract value-contract]) 
  interval-map?
  contents : (listof (cons/c (cons/c exact-integer? exact-integer?) any/c))
   = null
  key-contract : contract? = any/c
  value-contract : contract? = any/c
Makes a new interval-map initialized with contents, which has the form

(list (cons (cons start end) value) ...)

Examples:
> (define r (make-interval-map '(((0 . 5) . apple) ((5 . 10) . banana))))
> (interval-map-ref r 2)

'apple

> (interval-map-ref r 5)

'banana

procedure

(interval-map? v)  boolean?

  v : any/c
Returns #t if v is an interval-map, #f otherwise.

procedure

(interval-map-ref interval-map    
  position    
  [default])  any/c
  interval-map : interval-map?
  position : exact-integer?
  default : any/c = (lambda () (error ....))
Return the value associated with position in interval-map. If no mapping is found, default is applied if it is a procedure, or returned otherwise.

Added in version 1.1 of package data-lib.

procedure

(interval-map-ref/bounds interval-map 
  position 
  [default]) 
  
(or/c #f exact-integer?)
(or/c #f exact-integer?)
any/c
  interval-map : interval-map?
  position : exact-integer?
  default : any/c = (lambda () (error ....))
Like interval-map-ref, but also returns the bounds of the interval associated with position. If no mapping is found and default is a procedure, it is applied. If no mapping is found and default is not a procedure, #f is returned for the start and end positions and default is returned as the value.

procedure

(interval-map-set! interval-map    
  start    
  end    
  value)  void?
  interval-map : interval-map?
  start : exact-integer?
  end : exact-integer?
  value : any/c
Updates interval-map, associating every position in [start, end) with value.

Existing interval mappings contained in [start, end) are destroyed, and partly overlapping intervals are truncated. See interval-map-update*! for an updating procedure that preserves distinctions within [start, end).

procedure

(interval-map-update*! interval-map    
  start    
  end    
  updater    
  [default])  void?
  interval-map : interval-map?
  start : exact-integer?
  end : exact-integer?
  updater : (-> any/c any/c)
  default : any/c = (lambda () (error ....))
Updates interval-map, associating every position in [start, end) with the result of applying updater to the position’s previously associated value, or to the default value produced by default if no mapping exists.

Unlike interval-map-set!, interval-map-update*! preserves existing distinctions within [start, end).

procedure

(interval-map-remove! interval-map    
  start    
  end)  void?
  interval-map : interval-map?
  start : (or/c exact-integer? -inf.0)
  end : (or/c exact-integer? +inf.0)
Removes the value associated with every position in [start, end).

procedure

(interval-map-contract! interval-map    
  start    
  end)  void?
  interval-map : interval-map?
  start : exact-integer?
  end : exact-integer?
Contracts interval-map’s domain by removing all mappings on the interval [start, end) and decreasing intervals initally after end by (- end start).

If start is not less than end, an exception is raised.

procedure

(interval-map-expand! interval-map    
  start    
  end)  void?
  interval-map : interval-map?
  start : exact-integer?
  end : exact-integer?
Expands interval-map’s domain by introducing a gap [start, end) and increasing intervals starting at or after start by (- end start).

If start is not less than end, an exception is raised.

procedure

(interval-map-cons*! interval-map    
  start    
  end    
  v    
  [default])  void?
  interval-map : interval-map?
  start : any/c
  end : any/c
  v : any/c
  default : any/c = null
Same as the following:
(interval-map-update*! interval-map start end
                       (lambda (old) (cons v old))
                       default)

procedure

(interval-map-iterate-first interval-map)

  (or/c interval-map-iter? #f)
  interval-map : interval-map?

procedure

(interval-map-iterate-next interval-map 
  iter) 
  (or/c interval-map-iter? #f)
  interval-map : interval-map?
  iter : interval-map-iter?

procedure

(interval-map-iterate-key interval-map    
  iter)  pair?
  interval-map : interval-map?
  iter : interval-map-iter?

procedure

(interval-map-iterate-value interval-map    
  iter)  any
  interval-map : interval-map?
  iter : interval-map-iter?

procedure

(interval-map-iter? v)  boolean?

  v : any/c
Returns #t if v represents a position in an interval-map, #f otherwise.