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I need a queue with next properties and supported operations:

  • Push element in the beginning, automatically popping out from the end until size of queue become not greater than predefined limit.
  • Take N elements from beginning lazily and not traversing whole queue.
  • Limit by total size of all elements like 2Mb.

I know I can implement this by myself as a wrapper aroud Data.Sequence, or something else (according to mentioned implementations). Also found this blog post from Well Typed. I just wonder is this already implemented somewhere?

And if there is no standard implementation with desired behaviour, it would be nice to hear recommendations which standard data structure to use to implement such queue.

There is lrucache library which has almost anything I want except it limits it's size by number of elements in queue.

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  • "while current size is greater than predefined limit" did you mean "while current size is not greater than predefined limit"
    – Alec
    Feb 11, 2017 at 22:24
  • @Alec thanks! My English is far from good. I rewrote that sentence to make it more clear.
    – Shersh
    Feb 11, 2017 at 22:34
  • "Limit by total size of all elements like 2Mb" what about sharing or laziness? How are you going to measure size?
    – Alec
    Feb 11, 2017 at 22:34
  • @Alec In my current implementation I'm using Text data type, it seems not difficult for me to measure size (it will be even enough for me to use length as not so bad approximation of memory size). But I can imagine some API where you give value -> Word64 function which tells you how to measure size. Or maybe there are even exist some tricks aka sizeof in Haskell. Regarding sharing or laziness: I agree, it's very difficult to calculate such values in general case.
    – Shersh
    Feb 11, 2017 at 22:41
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    My point is that sometimes it makes no sense. If I have a giant byte string and I add to your queue slices of it, what is the size of the queue? What about an unevaluated thunk? But yes, the question becomes solvable if you give a 'size' function. I'm not sure the output will be useful though.
    – Alec
    Feb 11, 2017 at 22:50

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