I am writing an email application that interfaces with a MySQL database. I have two tables that are sourcing my data, one of which contains unsubscriptions, the other of which is a standard user table. As of now, I'm creating a vector of pointers to email objects, and storing all of the unsubscribed emails in it, initially. I then have a standard SQL loop in which I'm checking to see if the email is not in the unsubscribe vector, then adding it to the global send email vector. My question, is, is there a more efficient way of doing this? I have to search the unsub vector for every single email in my system, up to 50K different ones. Is there a better structure for searching? And, a better structure for maintaining a unique collection of values? Perhaps one that would simply discard the value if it already contains it?
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1DVK and Daniel Trebbien are right: it's almost certainly better to do this in the DB. I don't believe you when you say this is impossible -- please post the relevant parts of the schema.– j_random_hackerJan 11, 2011 at 17:03
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why generating emails prior to checking if the user wishes to receive it ? You're doing extra work here...– Matthieu M.Jan 12, 2011 at 16:32
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@Matthieu: I'm not generating email content, I'm gathering email addresses to cross reference.– JoshJan 12, 2011 at 18:30
4 Answers
If your C++ Standard Library implementation supports it, consider using a std::unordered_set
or a std::hash_set
.
You can also use std::set
, though its overhead might be higher (it depends on the cost of generating a hash for the object versus the cost of comparing two of the objects several times).
If you do use a node based container like set
or unordered_set
, you also get the advantage that removal of elements is relatively cheap compared to removal from a vector
.
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1
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2Also,
std::hash_set
is not part of the standard, you are better off usingboost::unordered_set
if you don't have either TR1 or c++0x. Jan 11, 2011 at 16:18 -
@Evan: You're right; I meant
std::unordered_set
. I haven't had coffee this morning. Most Standard Library implementations providehash_set
in one form or another. Jan 11, 2011 at 16:21
Tasks like this (set manipulations) are better left to what is MEANT to execute them - the database!
E.g. something along the lines of:
SELECT email FROM all_emails_table e WHERE NOT EXISTS ( SELECT 1 FROM unsubscribed u where e.email=u.email )
If you want an ALGORITHM, you can do this fast by retrieving both the list of emails AND a list of unsubscriptions as ORDERED lists. Then you can go through the e-mail list (which is ordered), and as you do it you glide along the unsubscribe list. The idea is that you move 1 forward in whichever list has the "biggest" current" element. This algo is O(M+N) instead of O(M*N) like your current one
Or, you can do a hash map which maps from unsubscribed e-mail address to 1. Then you do
find()
calls on that map whcih for correct hash implementations are O(1) for each lookup. Unfortunately, there's no Hash Map standard in C++ - please see this SO question for existing implementations (couple of ideas there are SGI's STL hash_map and Boost and/or TR1std::tr1::unordered_map
).One of the comments on that post indicates it will be added to the standard: "With this in mind, the C++ Standard Library Technical Report introduced the unordered associative containers, which are implemented using hash tables, and they have now been added to the Working Draft of the C++ Standard."
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Unfortunately, I can't do that for part of my application, due to the way one of the tables was previously laid out.– JoshJan 11, 2011 at 16:19
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2@Josh: Would you post the relevant parts of your schema? Do you have a separate table for unsubscribed e-mails? Jan 11, 2011 at 16:25
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Why not use a
LEFT OUTER JOIN
?SELECT `email` FROM `all_emails_table` AS `e` LEFT OUTER JOIN `unsubscribed` AS `u` ON `e`.`email` = `u`.`email` WHERE `u`.`email` IS NULL;
Jan 11, 2011 at 16:28 -
@Daniel - I come from TSQL background, so writing anti-joins via
NOT EXISTS
is more natural form me than ANSI SQL's equivalentLEFT OUTER JOIN
. But the two are pretty much the same (though not always so from performance standpoint - Google for "anti-join performance outer exists" or something like that for several excellent articles for various database servers - I know there are some for MySQL and MS SQL).– DVKJan 11, 2011 at 16:29
Store your email adresses in a std::set
or use std::set_difference()
.
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+1 for
set_difference
(because it's baked in), but I would recommend using 3 (sorted) vectors rather than sets, because it should be faster to traverse them (better memory locality). Alternatively,deque
could be considered too, if the size is large, and you're not using Dirkumware (and its small buckets). Jan 12, 2011 at 16:37 -
@Matthieu: When using
set_difference
, of course you would use sorted vectors. What else? Jan 12, 2011 at 16:41 -
just making sure :) node based containers can be painfully slow. Jan 12, 2011 at 17:43
The best way to do this is within MySQL, I think. You can modify your users table schema with another column, a BIT
column, for "is unsubscribed". Better yet: add a DATETIME
column for "date deleted" with a default value of NULL
.
If using a BIT
column, your query becomes something like:
SELECT * FROM `users` WHERE `unsubscribed` <> 0b1;
If using a DATETIME
column, your query becomes something like:
SELECT * FROM `users` WHERE `date_unsubscribed` IS NULL;
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Also, now you're unsubscribing users. The current schema unsubscribes email addresses, which isn't exactly the same thing. If a user changes their email address to one which is unsubscribed, then should they stop receiving messages? OP's approach says "yes", this says "no", which I would guess is more likely to be the right answer. Jan 11, 2011 at 18:55