A hash array mapped trie is an implementation of an associative array that combines the characteristics of a hash table and an array mapped trie. It is a refined version of the more general notion of a hash tree.
Operation
A HAMT is an array mapped trie where the keys are first hashed to ensure an even distribution of keys and a constant key length. In a typical implementation of HAMT's array mapped trie, each node contains a table with some fixed number N of slots with each slot containing either a nil pointer or a pointer to another node. N is commonly 32. As allocating space for N pointers for each node would be expensive, each node instead contains a bitmap which is N bits long where each bit indicates the presence of a non-nil pointer. This is followed by an array of pointers equal in length to the number of ones in the bitmap,.
Advantages of HAMTs
The hash array mapped trie achieves almost hash table-like speed while using memory much more economically. Also, a hash table may have to be periodically resized, an expensive operation, whereas HAMTs grow dynamically. Generally, HAMT performance is improved by a larger root table with some multiple of N slots; some HAMT variants allow the root to grow lazily with negligible impact on performance.
The programming languagesClojure, Scala, and Frege use a persistent variant of hash array mapped tries for their native hash map type. The Haskell library uses the same to implement persistent map and set data structures. Another Haskell library adapts the algorithm for use in the context of software transactional memory. A Javascript HAMT library based on the Clojure implementation is also available. The Rubinius implementation of Ruby includes a HAMT, mostly written in Ruby but with 3 primitives. Large maps in Erlang use a persistent HAMT representation internally since release 18.0. The Ponyprogramming language uses a HAMT for the hash map in its persistent collections package. The im and im-rc crates, which provide persistent collection types for the Rust programming language, use a HAMT for their persistent hash tables and hash sets. The concurrent lock-free version of the hash trie called Ctrie is a mutable thread-safe implementation which ensures progress. The data-structure has been proven to be correct - Ctrie operations have been shown to have the atomicity, linearizability and lock-freedom properties.