Ruby implementation of Ted Dunning's t-digest data structure.
Inspired by the Javascript implementation by Will Welch
Add this line to your application's Gemfile:
gem 'tdigest'
And then execute:
$ bundle
Or install it yourself as:
$ gem install tdigest
td = ::TDigest::TDigest.new
1_000.times { td.push(rand) }
td.compress!
puts td.percentile(0.5)
puts td.p_rank(0.95)
This gem offers the same serialization options as the original Java implementation. You can read more about T-digest persistence in Chapter 3 in the paper.
Standard encoding
This encoding uses 8-byte Double for the means and a 4-byte integer for counts. Size per centroid is a fixed 12-bytes.
bytes = tdigest.as_bytes
Compressed encoding
This encoding uses delta encoding with 4-byte floats for the means and variable length encoding for the counts. Size per centroid is between 5-12 bytes.
bytes = tdigest.as_small_bytes
Deserializing
Deserialization will automatically detect compression format
tdigest = TDigest::TDigest.from_bytes(bytes)
After checking out the repo, run bin/setup
to install dependencies. Then, run rake test
to run the tests. You can also run bin/console
for an interactive prompt that will allow you to experiment.
To install this gem onto your local machine, run bundle exec rake install
. To release a new version, update the version number in version.rb
, and then run bundle exec rake release
, which will create a git tag for the version, push git commits and tags, and push the .gem
file to rubygems.org.
Bug reports and pull requests are welcome on GitHub at https://github.com/castle/tdigest.
The gem is available as open source under the terms of the MIT License.