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1 /////////////////////////////////////////////////////////////////////////////
2 // Name: hashmap.h
3 // Purpose: interface of wxHashMap
4 // Author: wxWidgets team
5 // RCS-ID: $Id$
6 // Licence: wxWindows license
7 /////////////////////////////////////////////////////////////////////////////
8
9 /**
10 @class wxHashMap
11
12 This is a simple, type-safe, and reasonably efficient hash map class,
13 whose interface is a subset of the interface of STL containers.
14 In particular, the interface is modeled after std::map, and the various,
15 non-standard, std::hash_map (http://www.cppreference.com/wiki/stl/map/start).
16
17 Example:
18 @code
19 class MyClass { ... };
20
21 // declare a hash map with string keys and int values
22 WX_DECLARE_STRING_HASH_MAP( int, MyHash5 );
23 // same, with int keys and MyClass* values
24 WX_DECLARE_HASH_MAP( int, MyClass*, wxIntegerHash, wxIntegerEqual, MyHash1 );
25 // same, with wxString keys and int values
26 WX_DECLARE_STRING_HASH_MAP( int, MyHash3 );
27 // same, with wxString keys and values
28 WX_DECLARE_STRING_HASH_MAP( wxString, MyHash2 );
29
30 MyHash1 h1;
31 MyHash2 h2;
32
33 // store and retrieve values
34 h1[1] = new MyClass( 1 );
35 h1[10000000] = NULL;
36 h1[50000] = new MyClass( 2 );
37 h2["Bill"] = "ABC";
38 wxString tmp = h2["Bill"];
39 // since element with key "Joe" is not present, this will return
40 // the default value, which is an empty string in the case of wxString
41 MyClass tmp2 = h2["Joe"];
42
43 // iterate over all the elements in the class
44 MyHash2::iterator it;
45 for( it = h2.begin(); it != h2.end(); ++it )
46 {
47 wxString key = it->first, value = it->second;
48 // do something useful with key and value
49 }
50 @endcode
51
52
53 @section hashmap_declaringnew Declaring new hash table types
54
55 @code
56 WX_DECLARE_STRING_HASH_MAP( VALUE_T, // type of the values
57 CLASSNAME ); // name of the class
58 @endcode
59 Declares a hash map class named CLASSNAME, with wxString keys and VALUE_T values.
60
61 @code
62 WX_DECLARE_VOIDPTR_HASH_MAP( VALUE_T, // type of the values
63 CLASSNAME ); // name of the class
64 @endcode
65 Declares a hash map class named CLASSNAME, with void* keys and VALUE_T values.
66
67 @code
68 WX_DECLARE_HASH_MAP( KEY_T, // type of the keys
69 VALUE_T, // type of the values
70 HASH_T, // hasher
71 KEY_EQ_T, // key equality predicate
72 CLASSNAME); // name of the class
73 @endcode
74 The HASH_T and KEY_EQ_T are the types used for the hashing function and
75 key comparison. wxWidgets provides three predefined hashing functions:
76 @c wxIntegerHash for integer types ( int, long, short, and their unsigned counterparts ),
77 @c wxStringHash for strings ( wxString, wxChar*, char* ), and @c wxPointerHash for
78 any kind of pointer.
79 Similarly three equality predicates: @c wxIntegerEqual, @c wxStringEqual,
80 @c wxPointerEqual are provided.
81 Using this you could declare a hash map mapping int values to wxString like this:
82
83 @code
84 WX_DECLARE_HASH_MAP( int,
85 wxString,
86 wxIntegerHash,
87 wxIntegerEqual,
88 MyHash );
89
90 // using an user-defined class for keys
91 class MyKey { ... };
92
93 // hashing function
94 class MyKeyHash
95 {
96 public:
97 MyKeyHash() { }
98
99 unsigned long operator()( const MyKey& k ) const
100 {
101 // compute the hash
102 }
103
104 MyKeyHash& operator=(const MyKeyHash&) { return *this; }
105 };
106
107 // comparison operator
108 class MyKeyEqual
109 {
110 public:
111 MyKeyEqual() { }
112 bool operator()( const MyKey& a, const MyKey& b ) const
113 {
114 // compare for equality
115 }
116
117 MyKeyEqual& operator=(const MyKeyEqual&) { return *this; }
118 };
119
120 WX_DECLARE_HASH_MAP( MyKey, // type of the keys
121 SOME_TYPE, // any type you like
122 MyKeyHash, // hasher
123 MyKeyEqual, // key equality predicate
124 CLASSNAME); // name of the class
125 @endcode
126
127
128 @section hashmap_types Types
129
130 In the documentation below you should replace wxHashMap with the name you used
131 in the class declaration.
132
133 - wxHashMap::key_type: Type of the hash keys.
134 - wxHashMap::mapped_type: Type of the values stored in the hash map.
135 - wxHashMap::value_type: Equivalent to struct { key_type first; mapped_type second }.
136 - wxHashMap::iterator: Used to enumerate all the elements in a hash map;
137 it is similar to a value_type*.
138 - wxHashMap::const_iterator: Used to enumerate all the elements in a constant
139 hash map; it is similar to a const value_type*.
140 - wxHashMap::size_type: Used for sizes.
141 - wxHashMap::Insert_Result: The return value for insert().
142
143
144 @section hashmap_iter Iterators
145
146 An iterator is similar to a pointer, and so you can use the usual pointer operations:
147 ++it ( and it++ ) to move to the next element, *it to access the element pointed to,
148 it->first ( it->second ) to access the key ( value ) of the element pointed to.
149
150 Hash maps provide forward only iterators, this means that you can't use --it,
151 it + 3, it1 - it2.
152
153
154 @section hashmap_predef Predefined hashmap types
155
156 wxWidgets defines the following hashmap types:
157 - wxLongToLongHashMap (uses long both for keys and values)
158 - wxStringToStringHashMap (uses wxString both for keys and values)
159
160
161 @library{wxbase}
162 @category{containers}
163 */
164 class wxHashMap
165 {
166 public:
167 /**
168 The size parameter is just a hint, the table will resize automatically
169 to preserve performance.
170 */
171 wxHashMap(size_type size = 10);
172
173 /**
174 Copy constructor.
175 */
176 wxHashMap(const wxHashMap& map);
177
178 //@{
179 /**
180 Returns an iterator pointing at the first element of the hash map.
181 Please remember that hash maps do not guarantee ordering.
182 */
183 const_iterator begin() const;
184 iterator begin();
185 //@}
186
187 /**
188 Removes all elements from the hash map.
189 */
190 void clear();
191
192 /**
193 Counts the number of elements with the given key present in the map.
194 This function returns only 0 or 1.
195 */
196 size_type count(const key_type& key) const;
197
198 /**
199 Returns @true if the hash map does not contain any elements, @false otherwise.
200 */
201 bool empty() const;
202
203 //@{
204 /**
205 Returns an iterator pointing at the one-after-the-last element of the hash map.
206 Please remember that hash maps do not guarantee ordering.
207 */
208 const_iterator end() const;
209 iterator end();
210 //@}
211
212 //@{
213 /**
214 Erases the element with the given key, and returns the number of elements
215 erased (either 0 or 1).
216 */
217 size_type erase(const key_type& key);
218
219 /**
220 Erases the element pointed to by the iterator. After the deletion
221 the iterator is no longer valid and must not be used.
222 */
223 void erase(iterator it);
224 void erase(const_iterator it);
225 //@}
226
227 //@{
228 /**
229 If an element with the given key is present, the functions returns an
230 iterator pointing at that element, otherwise an invalid iterator is
231 returned; i.e.
232 @code
233 hashmap.find( non_existent_key ) == hashmap.end()
234 @endcode
235 */
236 iterator find(const key_type& key) const;
237 const_iterator find(const key_type& key) const;
238 //@}
239
240 /**
241 Inserts the given value in the hash map.
242 The return value is equivalent to a
243 @code std::pair<wxHashMap::iterator, bool> @endcode
244 The iterator points to the inserted element, the boolean value is @true
245 if @a v was actually inserted.
246 */
247 Insert_Result insert(const value_type& v);
248
249 /**
250 Use the key as an array subscript.
251 The only difference is that if the given key is not present in the hash map,
252 an element with the default @c value_type() is inserted in the table.
253 */
254 mapped_type operator[](const key_type& key);
255
256 /**
257 Returns the number of elements in the map.
258 */
259 size_type size() const;
260 };
261