As String Sink Save

An efficient dynamically sized string buffer (aka String Builder) for AssemblyScript

Project README

String Sink

Build Status npm

An efficient dynamically sized string buffer (aka String Builder) for AssemblyScript.

Interface

class StringSink {
  static withCapacity(capacity: i32)

  constructor(initial: string = "", capacity: i32 = 32)

  get length(): i32
  get capacity(): i32

  // Append sting or substring
  write(src: string, start?: i32, end?: i32): void
  // Append sting or substring with new line
  writeLn(src?: string, start?: i32, end?: i32): void
  // Append single code point
  writeCodePoint(code: i32): void
  // Append any integer or floating point number
  writeNumber<T>(value: T): void

  reserve(capacity: i32, clear?: bool): void
  shrink(): void
  clear(): void

  // Convert buffer to normal string
  toString(): string
}

Benchmark Results

StringSink can be up to 4000 times faster than naive string concatenation! And up to 6 times faster than JS concat which uses rope data structure under the hood.

100 strings:

String += JS:  0.013 ms
String += AS:  0.014 ms
StringSink AS: 0.0042 ms `(3x)`

50,000 strings:

String += JS:  3.34 ms
String += AS:  509.54 ms
StringSink AS: 0.73 ms `(~700x)`

200,000 strings:

String += JS:  11.93 ms
String += AS:  7622.72 ms
StringSink AS: 2.88 ms `(~2600x)`

Usage 1. String accumulation (+=)

non efficient example:

function toList(arr: string[]): string {
  let res = "";
  for (let i = 0, len = arr.length; i < len; i++) {
    res += arr[i] + "\n";
  }
  return res;
}

efficient with StringSink:

function toList(arr: string[]): string {
  let res = new StringSink();
  for (let i = 0, len = arr.length; i < len; i++) {
    res.write(arr[i] + "\n");
  }
  return res.toString();
}

even more efficient:

function toList(arr: string[]): string {
  let res = new StringSink();
  for (let i = 0, len = arr.length; i < len; i++) {
    res.writeLn(arr[i]);
  }
  return res.toString();
}

Complex example:

function zipAndStringify(names: string[], ages: i32[]): string {
  assert(names.length == ages.length);

  let res = new StringSink();
  res.writeLn('[');
  for (let i = 0, len = names.length; i < len; i++) {
    res.write('  { name: "');
    res.write(names[i]);
    res.write('", age: ');
    res.writeNumber(ages[i]);
    res.writeLn(' },');
  }
  res.write(']');
  return res.toString();
}

assert(zipAndStringify(
  ["Alan", "Elon", "John D."],
  [109, 50, 51]
) == `[
  { name: "Alan", age: 109 },
  { name: "Elon", age: 50 },
  { name: "John D.", age: 51 },
]`);

Usage 2. String accumulation (+=) only part of string

non efficient example:

function toListSliced(arr: string[]): string {
  let res = "";
  for (let i = 0, len = arr.length; i < len; i++) {
    res += arr[i].substring(1, 3);
  }
  return res;
}

more efficient with StringSink:

function toListSliced(arr: string[]): string {
  let res = new StringSink();
  for (let i = 0, len = arr.length; i < len; i++) {
    res.write(arr[i], 1, 3);
  }
  return res.toString();
}
Open Source Agenda is not affiliated with "As String Sink" Project. README Source: MaxGraey/as-string-sink
Stars
27
Open Issues
1
Last Commit
1 year ago
License
MIT

Open Source Agenda Badge

Open Source Agenda Rating