The most balanced case may be the insertion of a element in the middle of  a list, but this is far worst than to insert an element in a particular branch of a tree ( it needs an average of list-lenght/2 element creations while in a tree  needs only  (average-branch-length)/2)

I refer to Maps, because Hashtables, in the IO monad, are mutable.  by the way  let map2= map1 takes 0 bytes of memory And both do not share side effects, while creating two copies of a hastable to avoid side effects between them needs 2 * size.

2008/11/18 Tillmann Rendel <rendel@daimi.au.dk>
Hello Alberto,

I cc this to haskell-cafe again.


Alberto G. Corona wrote:
Not so much memory, because data is referentially transparent, the new Map
can point to whole subtrees of the old map that stay the same. is similar
than  when a new list is created by prefixing a new element from a old list
ys= x:xs.  ys is not at all a fresh copy, but  x plus a pointer to the head
of xs. this is the only new data that is needed to create ys.

You could just as well compare with appending a new element to the end of the list, which needs a complete copy of the list structure to be made. One has to look more closely to see which case it is here.

More specifically, I do not see how this sharing of substructures could be employed in the implementation of hash tables, which rely on O(1) random access into arrays.

 Tillmann