Metadata-Version: 1.1
Name: blist
Version: 0.9.17
Summary: a list-like type with better asymptotic performance and similar performance on small lists
Home-page: http://stutzbachenterprises.com/blist/
Author: Stutzbach Enterprises, LLC
Author-email: daniel@stutzbachenterprises.com
License: BSD
Description: 
        BList: a list-like type with better performance
        ===============================================
        
        The BList is a type that looks, acts, and quacks like a Python list,
        but has better performance for for modifying large lists.
        
        Earlier versions of BList were also slower for large lists that never
        change length, but this is no longer true as of version 0.9.6, which
        features amortized worst-case O(1) getitem and setitem operations.
        
        With that disclaimer out of the way, here are some of the use cases
        where the BLists is dramatically faster than the built-in list:
        
        1. Insertion into or removal from a large list (O(log n) vs. O(n))
        2. Taking large slices of large lists (O(log n) vs O(n))
        3. Making shallow copies of large lists (O(1) vs. O(n))
        4. Changing large slices of large lists (O(log n + log k) vs. O(n + k))
        5. Multiplying a list to make a large, sparse list (O(log k) vs. O(kn))
        
        You've probably noticed that we keep referring to "large lists".  For
        small lists, BLists and the built-in list have very similar
        performance.
        
        So you can see the performance of the BList in more detail, several
        performance graphs available at the following link: http://stutzbachenterprises.com/blist/
        
        Example usage:
        
        >>> from blist import *
        >>> x = blist([0])             # x is a BList with one element
        >>> x *= 2**29                 # x is a BList with > 500 million elements
        >>> x.append(5)                # append to x
        >>> y = x[4:-234234]           # Take a 500 million element slice from x
        >>> del x[3:1024]              # Delete a few thousand elements from x
        
        For comparison, on most systems the built-in list just raises
        MemoryError and calls it a day.
        
Keywords: blist list b+tree btree fast copy-on-write sparse array
Platform: UNKNOWN
Classifier: Development Status :: 4 - Beta
Classifier: Intended Audience :: Developers
Classifier: Intended Audience :: Science/Research
Classifier: License :: OSI Approved :: BSD License
Classifier: Programming Language :: C
Classifier: Programming Language :: Python :: 2.5
Classifier: Programming Language :: Python :: 2.6
Classifier: Programming Language :: Python :: 2.7
Classifier: Programming Language :: Python :: 3.0
Classifier: Programming Language :: Python :: 3.1
Provides: blist
