From: marcandre-ruby-core@... Date: 2020-09-02T13:44:54+00:00 Subject: [ruby-core:99838] [Ruby master Feature#16989] Sets: need ♥️ Issue #16989 has been updated by marcandre (Marc-Andre Lafortune). Eregon (Benoit Daloze) wrote in #note-11: > IMHO there is no need for a literal Set notation (which would anyway restrict the type of keys, etc). I agree. `Set[...]` works very well already for constructing sets at runtime out of any time of elements. > > Some of the upcoming feature requests would be easier (or only possible) to implement were Sets builtin. > > @marcandre Which feature requests except having a literal notation (#16994) require Set to be builtin? I think only #16993. Indeed, the static notation requires a change to the Ruby parser. #16993 would be easier and faster if builtin, although it is implementable with a `transform_values` as I showed in the issue. A bigger issue (and more important feature imo) is interoperability with Array #16990. If not in core, this would require monkeypatching a bunch of `Array` methods if not in core and would also require looping in Ruby so would not be as efficient. > I think we could make good progress here by addressing the other feature requests first. > > Also moving Set to core makes might make it more complicated to backport to older Rubies. If we want to backport to older Rubies, this could still partly be done with a gem, we'll just need some conditional definitions. ---------------------------------------- Feature #16989: Sets: need ������ https://bugs.ruby-lang.org/issues/16989#change-87363 * Author: marcandre (Marc-Andre Lafortune) * Status: Assigned * Priority: Normal * Assignee: knu (Akinori MUSHA) ---------------------------------------- I am opening a series of feature requests on `Set`, all of them based on this usecase. The main usecase I have in mind is my recent experience with `RuboCop`. I noticed a big number of frozen arrays being used only to later call `include?` on them. This is `O(n)` instead of `O(1)`. Trying to convert them to `Set`s causes major compatibility issues, as well as very frustrating situations and some cases that would make them much less efficient. Because of these incompatibilities, `RuboCop` is in the process of using a custom class based on `Array` with optimized `include?` and `===`. `RuboCop` runs multiple checks on Ruby code. Those checks are called cops. `RuboCop` performance is (IMO) pretty bad and some cops currently are in `O(n^2)` where n is the size of the code being inspected. Even given these extremely inefficient cops, optimizing the 100+ such arrays (most of which are quite small btw) gave a 5% speed boost. RuboCop PRs for reference: https://github.com/rubocop-hq/rubocop-ast/pull/29 https://github.com/rubocop-hq/rubocop/pull/8133 My experience tells me that there are many other opportunities to use `Set`s that are missed because `Set`s are not builtin, not known enough and have no shorthand notation. In this issue I'd like to concentrate the discussion on the following request: `Set`s should be core objects, in the same way that `Complex` were not and are now. Some of the upcoming feature requests would be easier (or only possible) to implement were `Set`s builtin. -- https://bugs.ruby-lang.org/ Unsubscribe: