I am looking for a data structure in Haskell that supports both fast indexing and fast append. This is for a memoization problem which arises from recursion.
From the way vectors work in c++ (which are mutable, but that shouldn’t matter in this case) it seems immutable vectors with both (amortized) O(1) append and O(1) indexing should be possible (ok, it’s not, see comments to this question). Is this poossible in Haskell or should I go with Data.Sequence which has (AFAICT anyway) O(1) append and O(log(min(i,n-i))) indexing?
On a related note, as a Haskell newbie I find myself longing for a practical, concise guide to Haskell data structures. Ideally this would give a fairly comprehensive overview over the most practical data structures along with performance characteristics and pointers to Haskell libraries where they are implemented. It seems that there is a lot of information out there, but I have found it to be a little scattered. Am I asking too much?
If memory serves, C++ vectors are implemented as an array with bounds and size information. When an insertion would increase the bounds beyond the size, the size is doubled. This is amortized O(1) time insertion (not O(1) as you claim), and can be emulated just fine in Haskell using the
Arraytype, perhaps with suitableIOorSTprepended.