HashMap: Difference between revisions

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m (getOrDefault)
(Key type information)
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  _myMap [[set]] ["z", 4];
  _myMap [[set]] ["z", 4];
  [[player]] [[getVariable]] "myMap"; {{cc|is [["a",1], ["b",2], ["c",3], ["z",4]]}}
  [[player]] [[getVariable]] "myMap"; {{cc|is [["a",1], ["b",2], ["c",3], ["z",4]]}}
=== Key Types ===
Due to the keys requirement to be hashable not all variable types are supported to be used as a key in the HashMap.
Supported types are:
- [[Scalar]]
- [[Bool]]
- [[String]]
- [[Code]]
- [[Side]]
- [[Config]]
- [[Namespace]]
- [[NaN]]
- [[Array]]
The [[Array]] type also can only contain supported types.
The virtual type [[HashMapKey]] is a combination of all supported types.


=== Creating a HashMap ===
=== Creating a HashMap ===
Line 44: Line 62:
  [[private]] _myMap = [[createHashMapFromArray]] <nowiki>[["a",1], ["b",2]]</nowiki>;
  [[private]] _myMap = [[createHashMapFromArray]] <nowiki>[["a",1], ["b",2]]</nowiki>;
  _overwritten = _myMap [[set]] ["a", 1337]; {{cc|_myMap is now [["a",1337], ["b",2]] and _overwritten is true}}
  _overwritten = _myMap [[set]] ["a", 1337]; {{cc|_myMap is now [["a",1337], ["b",2]] and _overwritten is true}}
Keys inside the Hashmap need to be of a supported type, not all types are supported.
GameScalar | GameBool | GameString | GameArray | GameCode | GameSide | GameConfig | GameNamespace | GameNaN
#TODO
#TODO HashMapKey type


=== Getting an element ===
=== Getting an element ===
Line 60: Line 71:
  _myMap [[get]] "z"; {{cc|returns [[Nothing]]}}
  _myMap [[get]] "z"; {{cc|returns [[Nothing]]}}
  _myMap [[getOrDefault]] ["z", "NotFound"]; {{cc|returns "NotFound"}}
  _myMap [[getOrDefault]] ["z", "NotFound"]; {{cc|returns "NotFound"}}
=== Checking if an element exists ===
You can check if a key is in the HashMap using the [[in]] command:
[[private]] _myMap = [[createHashMapFromArray]] <nowiki>[["a",1], ["b",2]]</nowiki>;
"a" [[in]] _myMap; {{cc|returns true}}
"z" [[in]] _myMap; {{cc|returns false}}


=== Counting elements ===
=== Counting elements ===
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  [[private]] _myMap = [[createHashMapFromArray]] <nowiki>[["a",1], ["b",2]]</nowiki>;
  [[private]] _myMap = [[createHashMapFromArray]] <nowiki>[["a",1], ["b",2]]</nowiki>;
  [[count]] _myMap ; {{cc|returns 2}}
  [[count]] _myMap ; {{cc|returns 2}}
=== Retrieving Keys ===
You can retrieve an [[Array]] of all keys in the HashMap using the [[keys]] command:
[[private]] _myMap = [[createHashMapFromArray]] <nowiki>[["a",1], ["b",2]]</nowiki>;
[[keys]] _myMap; {{cc|returns ["a", "b"]}}


=== HashMap Copy ===
=== HashMap Copy ===

Revision as of 13:28, 14 December 2020

Template:SideTOC A HashMap is a container storing Key-Value pairs which is very efficient with many entries that have different keys.
Due to keys being stored by their hash, a HashMap provides constant-time lookup for keys, meaning its very efficient for finding a key. More information on wikipedia: https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Hash_table
As a HashMap is a container, it stores some traits/properties with Arrays This container was added with v2.01 #TODO make a icon thingy or note thingy

See also: HashMaps

Working with Hash Maps

Array properties

A HashMap variable is a reference to the HashMap(see Wikipedia reference page); this means that if the HashMap is edited, all the scripts/functions using a reference to this HashMap will see the edition.

private _myMap = createHashMapFromArray [["a",1], ["b",2], ["c",3]];
private _myNewMap = _myMap;
_myMap set ["z", 4];
_myNewMap get "z"; // will be 4

An array set through setVariable does not need to be assigned again if you modify it by reference:

player setVariable ["myMap", createHashMapFromArray [["a",1], ["b",2], ["c",3]]];
private _myMap = player getVariable "myMap";
_myMap set ["z", 4];
player getVariable "myMap"; // is [["a",1], ["b",2], ["c",3], ["z",4]]

Key Types

Due to the keys requirement to be hashable not all variable types are supported to be used as a key in the HashMap.

Supported types are:

- Scalar
- Bool
- String
- Code
- Side
- Config
- Namespace
- NaN
- Array

The Array type also can only contain supported types. The virtual type HashMapKey is a combination of all supported types.

Creating a HashMap

// Example of an empty HashMap
private _myMap = createHashMap;
count _myMap;			// returns 0

// Example of a prefilled HashMap
private _myFilledMap = createHashMapFromArray [["a",1], ["b",2], ["c", 3]];
count _myFilledMap;	// returns 2

Setting an element

private _myMap = createHashMap;
_myMap set [1, "hello there"];	// _myMap is 1, "hello there"

Inserting an element with a key that already exists inside the HashMap, will overwrite the existing key.

private _myMap = createHashMapFromArray [["a",1], ["b",2]];
_overwritten = _myMap set ["a", 1337];	// _myMap is now [["a",1337], ["b",2]] and _overwritten is true

Getting an element

Values are retrieved by their key:

private _myMap = createHashMapFromArray [["a",1], ["b",2]];
_myMap get "a";	// returns 1
_myMap get "z";	// returns Nothing
_myMap getOrDefault ["z", "NotFound"];	// returns "NotFound"

Checking if an element exists

You can check if a key is in the HashMap using the in command:

private _myMap = createHashMapFromArray [["a",1], ["b",2]];
"a" in _myMap;	// returns true
"z" in _myMap;	// returns false

Counting elements

The count command can be used to return the number of Key-Value Pairs stored in the HashMap:

private _myMap = createHashMapFromArray [["a",1], ["b",2]];
count _myMap ; // returns 2


Retrieving Keys

You can retrieve an Array of all keys in the HashMap using the keys command:

private _myMap = createHashMapFromArray [["a",1], ["b",2]];
keys _myMap; // returns ["a", "b"]

HashMap Copy

private _myMap = createHashMapFromArray [["a",1], ["b",2]];
private _myNewMap = _myMap;
_myMap set ["a", 1337];
_myNewMap get "a"; // will be 1337

In order to avoid this behaviour, copy the HashMap with + (plus):

// making copy
private _myMap = createHashMapFromArray [["a",1], ["b",2]];
private _myNewMap = +_myMap;
_myMap set ["a", 1337];
_myNewMap get "a"; // still 1

Arrays stored as Key or value in the HashMap will also be deep-copied.

Removing (deleting) elements

You can remove elements from the HashMap by using deleteAt with the elements key:

private _myMap = createHashMapFromArray [["a",1], ["b",2]];
_myMap deleteAt "b"; // _myMap is "a",1

Iterating through the HashMap

The simplest way to iterate through a HashMap is the forEach command:

private _myMap = createHashMapFromArray [["a",1], ["b",2]];
{ systemChat str [ _x, _y ] } forEach _myMap;

When iterating through a HashMap with forEach, the _x variable holds the key of the current element, while the _y variable holds its value.

Advanced usage

Common errors

Scalar Key precision

bla bla when using scalar key bla bla link to wikipedia floating point precision


See Also