Overview:
An interval tree can be used to efficiently find a set of numeric
intervals overlapping or containing another interval.
This library provides a basic implementation of an interval tree using
C++ templates, allowing the insertion of arbitrary types into the
tree.
Usage:
Add #include "IntervalTree.h" to the source files in which you will
use the interval tree.
To make an IntervalTree to contain objects of class T, use:
vector<Interval<T> > intervals;
T a, b, c;
intervals.push_back(Interval<T>(2, 10, a));
intervals.push_back(Interval<T>(3, 4, b));
intervals.push_back(Interval<T>(20, 100, c));
IntervalTree<T> tree;
tree = IntervalTree<T>(intervals);
Now, it's possible to query the tree and obtain a set of intervals
which are contained within the start and stop coordinates.
vector<Interval<T> > results;
tree.findContained(start, stop, results);
cout << "found " << results.size()
<< " overlapping intervals" << endl;
The function IntervalTree::findOverlapping provides a method to find
all those intervals which are contained or partially overlap the
interval (start, stop).
Author: Erik Garrison <erik.garrison@gmail.com>
License: MIT