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Package bitset implements bitsets, a mapping between non-negative integers and boolean values.
It should be more efficient than map[uint] bool.
It provides methods for setting, clearing, flipping, and testing individual integers.
But it also provides set intersection, union, difference, complement, and symmetric operations, as well as tests to check whether any, all, or no bits are set, and querying a bitset's current length and number of positive bits.
BitSets are expanded to the size of the largest set bit; the memory allocation is approximately Max bits, where Max is the largest set bit. BitSets are never shrunk automatically, but Shrink and Compact methods are available. On creation, a hint can be given for the number of bits that will be used.
Many of the methods, including Set, Clear, and Flip, return a BitSet pointer, which allows for chaining.
Example use:
package main
import (
"fmt""math/rand""github.com/bits-and-blooms/bitset"
)
funcmain() {
fmt.Printf("Hello from BitSet!\n")
varb bitset.BitSet// play some Go Fishfori:=0; i<100; i++ {
card1:=uint(rand.Intn(52))
card2:=uint(rand.Intn(52))
b.Set(card1)
ifb.Test(card2) {
fmt.Println("Go Fish!")
}
b.Clear(card1)
}
// Chainingb.Set(10).Set(11)
fori, e:=b.NextSet(0); e; i, e=b.NextSet(i+1) {
fmt.Println("The following bit is set:", i)
}
ifb.Intersection(bitset.New(100).Set(10)).Count() ==1 {
fmt.Println("Intersection works.")
} else {
fmt.Println("Intersection doesn't work???")
}
}
If you have Go 1.23 or better, you can iterate over the set bits like so:
You may serialize a bitset safely and portably to a stream
of bytes as follows:
constlength=9585constoneEvery=97bs:=bitset.New(length)
// Add some bitsfori:=uint(0); i<length; i+=oneEvery {
bs=bs.Set(i)
}
varbuf bytes.Buffern, err:=bs.WriteTo(&buf)
iferr!=nil {
// failure
}
// Here n == buf.Len()
You can later deserialize the result as follows:
// Read back from bufbs=bitset.New()
n, err=bs.ReadFrom(&buf)
iferr!=nil {
// error
}
// n is the number of bytes read
The ReadFrom function attempts to read the data into the existing
BitSet instance, to minimize memory allocations.
Performance tip:
When reading and writing to a file or a network connection, you may get better performance by
wrapping your streams with bufio instances.
E.g.,
f, err:=os.Create("myfile")
w:=bufio.NewWriter(f)
f, err:=os.Open("myfile")
r:=bufio.NewReader(f)
Memory Usage
The memory usage of a bitset using N bits is at least N/8 bytes. The number of bits in a bitset is at least as large as one plus the greatest bit index you have accessed. Thus it is possible to run out of memory while using a bitset. If you have lots of bits, you might prefer compressed bitsets, like the Roaring bitmaps and its Go implementation.
The roaring library allows you to go back and forth between compressed Roaring bitmaps and the conventional bitset instances:
In general, it's not safe to access the same BitSet using different goroutines--they are unsynchronized for performance.
Should you want to access a BitSet from more than one goroutine, you should provide synchronization. Typically this is done by using channels to pass the *BitSet around (in Go style; so there is only ever one owner), or by using sync.Mutex to serialize operations on BitSets.
Installation
go get github.com/bits-and-blooms/bitset
Contributing
If you wish to contribute to this project, please branch and issue a pull request against master ("GitHub Flow")
Running all tests
Before committing the code, please check if it passes tests, has adequate coverage, etc.