问题
I have big set of urls and I want to implement an autocompletion. I don't like the complexity of the naive approach as it is linear with the set size:
for(String url: urls) if(url.startsWith(input) {doSomething();}
Now I know that in a Hash Set, the function "contains()" works in "O(1)" but there is no "containsPrefix()". Is there a simple way without using a big library like Lucene or coding it myself? I would have no problem doing it but it seems overkill for such a simple problem so I want to know if there is an existing simple solution :-)
From my computer science classes I remember a tree which consists of string fragments but I forget how it was called. It worked like this:
[car, care, carrot,carrotville]->
car
|
-/
-e
-rrot
|
----ville
P.S.: How do I call the methods that returns all strings that a string is prefix of? Like if a is prefix of b, what is b to a?
回答1:
If you need to efficiently find prefixes of strings, use a Trie, a data structure designed precisely for that purpose:
A trie, or prefix tree, is an ordered tree data structure that is used to store an associative array where the keys are usually strings. Unlike a binary search tree, no node in the tree stores the key associated with that node; instead, its position in the tree defines the key with which it is associated. All the descendants of a node have a common prefix of the string associated with that node, and the root is associated with the empty string
Two links with sample implementations.
回答2:
Long time ago I put a simple Trie implementation here:
http://code.google.com/p/triebag/source/browse/trunk/src/triebag/tries/SimpleTrie.java
However this is not a compact Trie, so it creates one node per character, creating a compact one is a bit trickier.
回答3:
A great alternative algo is a ternary search tree (more memory efficient) https://github.com/varunpant/TernaryTree/tree/master/TernaryTree
here is a trie in java http://algs4.cs.princeton.edu/52trie/TrieST.java.html
回答4:
The Regexp implementation java.util.regex.Pattern can efficiently handle prefixes:
StringBuilder buffer = new StringBuilder();
for (String prefix : prefixes) {
if (buffer.length() > 0)
buffer.append("|");
buffer.append(prefix);
}
Pattern prefixPattern = Pattern.compile("^(" + buffer + ")");
You can test all prefixes:
boolean containsPrefix = prefixPattern.matcher(stringToTest).find();
Note: for simplicity, prefix strings are not escaped. Regexp characters [, ], \, *, ?, $, ^, (, ), {, } and | have to be prefixed by \.
来源:https://stackoverflow.com/questions/9887729/how-to-create-a-simple-prefix-index-in-java