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I have a collection of elements with an integer range such as

case class Element(id: Int, from: Int, to: Int)
val elementColl: Traversable[Element]

and I want to accumulate them into

case class ElementAcc(ids: List[Int], from: Int, to: Int)

according to the following algorithm:

  1. Take one Element from my elementColl and use it to create a new ElementsAcc which has the same from/to as the Element taken.
  2. Iterate over remaining elements in elementColl to look for an Element that has an overlapping integer range with our ElementAcc.
  3. If one is found, add it to ElementAcc and expand the integer range of ElementAcc to include the range of the new Element
  4. If none is found, repeat the process above on the remaining elements of elementColl that have not yet been assigned to an ElementAcc

This should result in collection of ElementAcc's. While just recursively adding elements to an accumulator seems easy enough, I don't know how to handle the shrinking size of elementColl so that I don't add the same Element to multiple ElementAcc's

Edit: I think I was unclear regarding the extension of the range. So let my clarify this on an example:

My accumulator currently has a range from 1 to 5. An Element with a range from 6 to 8 does not overlap with the accumulator range and thus will not be included. An Element with a range of 4 to 7 does overlap, will be included and the resulting accumulator has a range from 1 to 7.

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  • 1
    Sort you sequence first (by (from, to) tuple), then do a fold. The rules for the fold are a bit subtle due to several different cases for ranges of the neighbouring elements, but it is doable.
    – Ashalynd
    Sep 30, 2014 at 13:59

1 Answer 1

3

I'll go like this:

1) Write a function that takes an ElementAcc and an Element and returns an ElementAcc. The function would look like:

def extend(acc: ElementAcc, e: Element): ElementAcc = {
  if(acc.from <= e.from && e.from <= acc.to)
    ElementAcc(e.id :: acc.ids, acc.from, math.max(acc.to, e.to))
  else if (acc.from <= e.to && e.to <= acc.to)
    ElementAcc(e.id :: acc.ids, math.min(acc.from, e.from), acc.to)
  else acc
}

foldLeft is often the good solution when accumulating objects. It needs an initial value for the accumulator and an function that takes an accumulator and an element and returns an accumulator. Then it accumulates all elements of the traversable.

EDIT:

2) To accumulate on different lists you would have to create another function to combine a List[ElementAcc] and an Element :

def overlap(acc: ElementAcc, e: Element): Boolean = {
  (acc.from <= e.from && e.from <= acc.to) || (acc.from <= e.to && e.to <= acc.to)
} 

def dispatch(accList: List[ElementAcc], e: Element): List[ElementAcc] = accList match {
  case Nil => List(ElementAcc(List(e.id), e.from, e.to))
  case acc :: tail =>
    if (overlap(acc, e)) extend(acc, e) :: tail
    else acc :: dispatch(tail, e)
}

3) And it's used with a foldLeft:

val a = Element(0, 0, 5)
val b = Element(1, 3, 8)
val c = Element(2, 20, 30)
val sorted = List(a, b, c).foldLeft(List[ElementAcc]())(dispatch)

sorted: List[ElementAcc] = List(ElementAcc(List(1, 0),0,8), ElementAcc(List(2),20,30))
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  • The range adjustment is slightly wrong, but that is not that big of a problem. I was struggling with creating multiple ElementAcc's, since each Element is supposed to be added only once. Therefore after creating one ElementAcc, the remaining collection of Elements is shortened by one to n.
    – Marco
    Sep 30, 2014 at 13:40
  • @MarcoK I modified a bit extend so you can provide a generic zero to the foldLeft call. It avoids you to look inside your Element traversable. Hope that answer your question.
    – gwenzek
    Sep 30, 2014 at 13:52
  • Yes, but what if we have a 3rd element val c = Element(3, 4, 6). This should not be added to the first ElementAcc but create a new one. The Result should be something like List(ElementAcc(List(2, 1),0,3), ElementAcc(List(3),4,6))
    – Marco
    Sep 30, 2014 at 14:01
  • This is more complicated. This time you need a method that would insert an Element inside of a list of ElementAcc. And if the the Element find two suitable accs, you want to merge this two accs, is that it ? This the problem of finding the number of connected components.
    – gwenzek
    Sep 30, 2014 at 14:13
  • Ideally there should never be the case where an Element can be assigned to 2 different ElementAcc. We iterate of the Element collection and add to an ElementAcc until no Element satisfies the condition anymore. Only then a new ElementAcc is created. As @Ashalynd pointed out this is probably easiest done by sorting the collection first.
    – Marco
    Sep 30, 2014 at 14:30

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