lseq/typescript/README.md

61 lines
1.9 KiB
Markdown
Raw Normal View History

# @peoplesgrocers/lseq
TypeScript implementation of the L-SEQ algorithm for fractional indexing and list CRDTs.
## Installation
```bash
npm install @peoplesgrocers/lseq
```
## Usage
```typescript
import { LSEQ, compareLSEQ } from '@peoplesgrocers/lseq';
// Create a new L-SEQ instance
const lseq = new LSEQ();
// Allocate identifiers
const id1 = lseq.alloc(null, null); // First identifier
const id2 = lseq.alloc(id1, null); // After id1
const id3 = lseq.alloc(id1, id2); // Between id1 and id2
// Sort identifiers
const ids = [id3, id1, id2];
ids.sort(compareLSEQ);
console.log(ids); // [id1, id3, id2] - properly ordered
// Custom random function (useful for deterministic testing)
const deterministicLSEQ = new LSEQ(() => 0.5);
```
## API
### `LSEQ`
#### `constructor(random?: () => number)`
Creates a new L-SEQ instance.
- `random`: Optional custom random function (defaults to `Math.random`)
#### `alloc(before: string | null, after: string | null): string`
Allocates a new identifier between two existing identifiers.
- `before`: The identifier that should come before the new one (or `null` for beginning)
- `after`: The identifier that should come after the new one (or `null` for end)
- Returns: A new identifier that sorts between `before` and `after`
### `compareLSEQ(a: string, b: string): number`
Compares two L-SEQ identifiers for sorting.
- Returns: `-1` if `a < b`, `1` if `a > b`, `0` if `a === b`
## How it works
L-SEQ generates identifiers using a base-64 alphabet that maintains lexicographic ordering. Each identifier is a sequence of characters from this alphabet, and new identifiers are generated by finding space between existing ones at different depths.
The algorithm uses alternating allocation strategies (bias toward min or max) at different depths to avoid degenerative cases and maintain good performance characteristics.