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As we all know skip list is such a fascinating data structure with O(logn) insertion/search with ease of implementation over complex (AVL, Red-black) trees and also it is already been implemented in various applications and frameworks.

Is their any obvious reason why .NET is unaware of this data structure (java already implemented though)?

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  • How is ConcurrentDictionary inconsistent? The example on MSDN regarding GetOrAdd leads to perfectly consistent behaviour within the dictionary. If you need higher level transactions, you will need to implement them yourself. Nov 10, 2013 at 10:07
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    AVL and red-black are also O(logN). Alternative algorithms like skip lists that promise a smaller Oh are quickly defeated by modern processors, cache is king and any algorithm that ignores them will only ever look good on paper. Just never write code that adds the same item to a collection with more than one thread and expect one of them to always "win". That never works, regardless of the collection type. Nov 10, 2013 at 11:28
  • @HansPassant: great advice. As skip list is randomized and probabilistic collection type, its average case lowers as nodes rises, this looks unnatural but fascinates me. Ya, those trees have also same asymptotic bounds, but complex in implementation. I don't understand how skip list algorithms ignores cache? Nov 10, 2013 at 13:07
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    Not sure what answers do you expect. "why .net is unaware of this data structure"? Because they didn't implement it (yet?). What more can be said?
    – BartoszKP
    Jan 5, 2014 at 14:24
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    @BartoszKP: Sorry that question is informative, but it hurts when you love some data structure so much but don't find any concrete implementation on monster frameworks like .NET. Hash table along with other dictionary collection types are already there but not skip list. Jan 5, 2014 at 15:57

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