Question

I need a data structure that acts like a SortedDictionary<int, double> but is sorted based on the values rather than the keys. I need it to take about 1-2 microseconds to add and remove items when we have about 3000 items in the dictionary.

My first thought was simply to switch the keys and values in my code. This very nearly works. I can add and remove elements in about 1.2 microseconds in my testing by doing this.

But the keys have to be unique in a SortedDictionary so that means that values in my inverse dictionary would have to be unique. And there are some cases where they may not be.

Any ideas of something in the .NET libraries already that would work for me?

Was it helpful?

Solution

The PowerCollections library has a class called OrderedMultiDictionary<TKey, TValue> that is basically like a SortedDictionary<TKey, TValue> but allows duplicates. When you lookup a key, you get an enumerable instead of a single value.

The library is free and you should be able to do exactly what you want with that class - store the values as the keys.

OTHER TIPS

You can sort SortedDictionary by value like this:

yourList.Sort(
    delegate(KeyValuePair<int, double> val1,
    KeyValuePair<int, double> val2)
    {
        return val1.Value.CompareTo(val2.Value);
    }
);
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