Basic Data Structures Explained

By: Great Lakes Consulting

Re-posted from: https://blog.glcs.io/basic-data-structures

Julia is a relatively new,
free, and open-source programming language.
It has a syntax
similar to that of other popular programming languages
such as MATLAB and Python,
but it boasts being able to achieve C-like speeds.

Julia provides several useful data structures
for storing and manipulating data.
Some of these data structures,
like arrays and dictionaries,
are ubiquitous in Julia code
because of their usefulness
and wide applicability.
Others, like sets,
have more limited uses
but nevertheless
still are useful data structures.

In this post,
we will learn about
arrays, dictionaries, and sets
in Julia.
We will discuss how to construct them
and describe various functions
for working with and manipulating them.

This post assumes you already have Julia installed.
If you haven’t yet,
check out our earlier
post on how to install Julia.

Arrays

One of the most basic and ubiquitous data structures
is the array.
Arrays are used for storing values,
iterating through values,
and even representing mathematical vectors and matrices.

The basic array type in Julia is Array{T,N},
where T is the type of the elements in the array
(or an abstract supertype of the elements
if not all elements are of the same type),
and N is the number of array dimensions.
For example,
a list of strings would be of type Array{String,1},
while a matrix of numbers would be of type Array{Float64,2}.

Constructing Arrays

There are various ways
to construct arrays.
One common way
is to construct an array
directly from the values
it will contain:

julia> ["some", "strings"]
2-element Vector{String}:
 "some"
 "strings"

julia> [1 2; 3 4]
2x2 Matrix{Int64}:
 1  2
 3  4

(Note that Vector{T} is equivalent to Array{T,1}
and that Matrix{T} is equivalent to Array{T,2}.)

Example arrays

Another common way
to construct arrays
is using array comprehensions.
An array comprehension
creates an array
by looping through a collection of values
and computing an array element
for each value.
For example,
the following creates an array
containing the squares
of the first five natural numbers:

julia> [x^2 for x = 1:5]
5-element Vector{Int64}:
  1
  4
  9
 16
 25

Multidimensional comprehensions also exist:

julia> [(x - 2)^2 + (y - 3)^2 <= 1 for x = 1:3, y = 1:5]
3x5 Matrix{Bool}:
 0  0  1  0  0
 0  1  1  1  0
 0  0  1  0  0

We can also create uninitialized arrays,
either by passing undef to the array constructor
or by calling similar:

julia> Array{Int,1}(undef, 1)
1-element Vector{Int64}:
 6303840

julia> similar([1.0, 2.0])
2-element Vector{Float64}:
 6.94291544947797e-310
 6.94291610129443e-310

(Note that the seemingly random numbers above
come from whatever bits happen to be set
in the memory allocated for the arrays.)

To create an array of zeros,
call zeros:

julia> zeros(2, 3)
2x3 Matrix{Float64}:
 0.0  0.0  0.0
 0.0  0.0  0.0

Inspecting Arrays

Information about an array
can be obtained using various functions.

length gives the number of elements
in an array:

julia> length([1, 2, 3])
3

julia> length(zeros(2, 3))
6

size(x) gives the size of x,
while size(x, d) gives the size
of the dth dimension:

julia> size([1, 2, 3])
(3,)

julia> size(zeros(2, 3))
(2, 3)

julia> size(zeros(2, 3), 2)
3

ndims gives the number of dimensions
of an array:

julia> ndims(zeros(1, 2, 3, 4, 5, 6))
6

And eltype gives the type
of the elements of an array:

julia> eltype(["two", "strings"])
String

julia> eltype([2, "different types"])
Any

Array Operations

Accessing array elements
is achieved using brackets:

julia> a = [10, 20, 30];

julia> a[2]
20

(Note that arrays use one-based indexing
in Julia.)

A similar syntax is used
to modify the contents of an array:

julia> a[1] = 0
0

julia> a
3-element Vector{Int64}:
  0
 20
 30

Use commas (,) to separate indexes
for different dimensions,
and use a colon (:)
to select all the values
along a dimension:

julia> m = [1 2; 3 4]
2x2 Matrix{Int64}:
 1  2
 3  4

julia> m[1,2]
2

julia> m[:,1]
2-element Vector{Int64}:
 1
 3

Multiple indexes can be provided:

julia> a[[1, 3]]
2-element Vector{Int64}:
  0
 30

To assign a single value
to multiple array locations,
use broadcasting:

julia> a[2:3] .= 0
2-element view(::Vector{Int64}, 2:3) with eltype Int64:
 0
 0

julia> a
3-element Vector{Int64}:
 0
 0
 0

Arrays are also iterable,
meaning we can loop through
the values of an array:

julia> words = ["this", "is", "a", "sentence"];

julia> for w in words
           println(w)
       end
this
is
a
sentence

Arrays as Stacks/Queues/Dequeues

Julia also provides some functions
that allow arrays to be used
in a similar way
as stacks, queues, and dequeues.
For example,
push!(array, x) inserts x
at the end of an array,
and pop!(array) removes the last element
of an array.
Similarly,
pushfirst! and popfirst
act on the beginning of an array.

Ranges

Ranges are another useful type of array,
often used for looping
and array indexing.

The simplest syntax
for creating a range
is a:b,
which creates a range
that starts at a
and includes all values
a + 1, a + 2, etc.,
as long as a + n <= b.
For example,
1:5 contains 1, 2, 3, 4, and 5,
while 1.0:2.5 contains 1.0 and 2.0.

A step size, s, can also be specified,
as in a:s:b.
In this case, the spacing between values
in the range
is s instead of 1.

To create a range of N points
between a and b, inclusive,
use range(a, b, N).

Unlike Arrays,
ranges are immutable,
meaning their elements
can’t be modified.
If modifying an element of a range
is necessary,
it must first be converted
into an Array
by calling collect:

julia> r = 1:2
1:2

julia> r[1] = 10
ERROR: CanonicalIndexError: setindex! not defined for UnitRange{Int64}

julia> r_arr = collect(r)
2-element Vector{Int64}:
 1
 2

julia> r_arr[1] = 10; r_arr
2-element Vector{Int64}:
 10
  2

That concludes our discussion of arrays,
so now let’s move on to dictionaries.

Dictionaries

Another very common data structure
is the dictionary.
A dictionary is a mapping
from keys to values:
give a dictionary a key,
and it will return
the value associated with that key
(if present).

In Julia,
dictionaries are of type Dict{K,V},
where K is the type of the keys,
and V is the type of the values.

Dictionaries are constructed
by providing key-value pairs:

julia> d = Dict("key1" => 1, "key2" => 2, "key3" => 3)
Dict{String, Int64} with 3 entries:
  "key2" => 2
  "key3" => 3
  "key1" => 1

(Note that a => b
creates a Pair in Julia.)

Indexing a dictionary
uses the same syntax
as indexing an array,
just using keys
instead of array indexes:

julia> d["key2"]
2

Accessing a dictionary

Use haskey to check
for the presence of a key:

julia> haskey(d, "key3")
true

julia> haskey(d, "nope")
false

Dictionaries can also be updated:

julia> d["key1"] = 9999
9999

julia> d["newkey"] = -9999
-9999

julia> d
Dict{String, Int64} with 4 entries:
  "key2"   => 2
  "key3"   => 3
  "key1"   => 9999
  "newkey" => -9999

Use delete!(dict, key)
to delete the mapping
for the given key,
if present.

We can also iterate
through the keys and/or values
of a dictionary:

  • Iterating keys: for k in keys(dict)
  • Iterating values: for v in values(dict)
  • Iterating both: for (k, v) in dict

That wraps up our discussion of dictionaries,
so now we will move on to sets.

Sets

A set is a collection of unique elements.
In Julia,
sets are of type Set{T},
where T is the type
of the elements of the set.
Sets are useful
for their efficient set operations,
such as membership testing,
union, and intersect.

Create an empty set of Float64 values as follows:

julia> s = Set{Float64}()
Set{Float64}()

Use push! to add values
to the set,
noticing that the set changes
only if the value does not already exist
in the set:

julia> push!(s, 1.0);

julia> push!(s, 1.2);

julia> push!(s, 3.14)
Set{Float64} with 3 elements:
  1.2
  3.14
  1.0

julia> push!(s, 1.0)
Set{Float64} with 3 elements:
  1.2
  3.14
  1.0

Use union to take the union
of two sets:

julia> t = Set([1.0, 2.0])
Set{Float64} with 2 elements:
  2.0
  1.0

julia> r = s  t # type \cup<tab> to get the union symbol
Set{Float64} with 4 elements:
  1.2
  2.0
  3.14
  1.0

(Note that s t == union(s, t).)

Use intersect to take the intersection
of two sets:

julia> r  t # type \cap<tab> to get the intersection symbol
Set{Float64} with 2 elements:
  2.0
  1.0

(Note that s t == intersect(s, t).)

Finally,
we can check if an element
belongs to a set
with in:

julia> 1.0  r # type \in<tab> to get the "is an element of" symbol
true

(Note that and in are interchangeable here.)

And with that,
we conclude our overview
of some important Julia data structures.

Summary

In this post,
we learned about a few data structures
that Julia provides:
arrays, dictionaries, and sets.
We learned how to construct them
and how to work with and manipulate them.

What are the most useful data structures
you have used?
Let us know in the comments below!

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