K-dimensional tree in Rust for fast geospatial indexing and nearest neighbors lookup
Add kdtree
to Cargo.toml
[dependencies]
kdtree = "0.7.0"
Add points to kdtree and query nearest n points with distance function
use kdtree::KdTree;
use kdtree::ErrorKind;
use kdtree::distance::squared_euclidean;
let a: ([f64; 2], usize) = ([0f64, 0f64], 0);
let b: ([f64; 2], usize) = ([1f64, 1f64], 1);
let c: ([f64; 2], usize) = ([2f64, 2f64], 2);
let d: ([f64; 2], usize) = ([3f64, 3f64], 3);
let dimensions = 2;
let mut kdtree = KdTree::new(dimensions);
kdtree.add(&a.0, a.1).unwrap();
kdtree.add(&b.0, b.1).unwrap();
kdtree.add(&c.0, c.1).unwrap();
kdtree.add(&d.0, d.1).unwrap();
assert_eq!(kdtree.size(), 4);
assert_eq!(
kdtree.nearest(&a.0, 0, &squared_euclidean).unwrap(),
vec![]
);
assert_eq!(
kdtree.nearest(&a.0, 1, &squared_euclidean).unwrap(),
vec![(0f64, &0)]
);
assert_eq!(
kdtree.nearest(&a.0, 2, &squared_euclidean).unwrap(),
vec![(0f64, &0), (2f64, &1)]
);
assert_eq!(
kdtree.nearest(&a.0, 3, &squared_euclidean).unwrap(),
vec![(0f64, &0), (2f64, &1), (8f64, &2)]
);
assert_eq!(
kdtree.nearest(&a.0, 4, &squared_euclidean).unwrap(),
vec![(0f64, &0), (2f64, &1), (8f64, &2), (18f64, &3)]
);
assert_eq!(
kdtree.nearest(&a.0, 5, &squared_euclidean).unwrap(),
vec![(0f64, &0), (2f64, &1), (8f64, &2), (18f64, &3)]
);
assert_eq!(
kdtree.nearest(&b.0, 4, &squared_euclidean).unwrap(),
vec![(0f64, &1), (2f64, &0), (2f64, &2), (8f64, &3)]
);
cargo bench
with 2.3 GHz Intel i5-7360U:
cargo bench
Running target/release/deps/bench-9e622e6a4ed9b92a
running 2 tests
test bench_add_to_kdtree_with_1k_3d_points ... bench: 106 ns/iter (+/- 25)
test bench_nearest_from_kdtree_with_1k_3d_points ... bench: 1,237 ns/iter (+/- 266)
test result: ok. 0 passed; 0 failed; 0 ignored; 2 measured; 0 filtered out
Thanks Eh2406 for various fixes and perf improvements.
Licensed under either of
- Apache License, Version 2.0 (LICENSE-APACHE or http://www.apache.org/licenses/LICENSE-2.0)
- MIT License (LICENSE-MIT or http://opensource.org/licenses/MIT)
at your option.
Unless you explicitly state otherwise, any contribution intentionally submitted for inclusion in the work by you, as defined in the Apache-2.0 license, shall be dual licensed as above, without any additional terms or conditions.