开发者

How to create a 2 way map in java

I need a data structure to store string-int value pairs in an 1:1 relationship, and being able too look up from either way their counterpart.

I wrote a cl开发者_JAVA技巧ass with a Hashtable and a String array and stored the data 2 times and used the built in functions for lookup.

My question is that is there a nicer way to accomplish this? And by nicer I mean being efficient and not storing the data 2 times, and preferably without writing a ton of code either :P.


It seems like you may be looking for a bimap.

The Google Collections (now a part of Guava) contains an BiMap interface with a few implementations.

From the BiMap documentation:

A bimap (or "bidirectional map") is a map that preserves the uniqueness of its values as well as that of its keys. This constraint enables bimaps to support an "inverse view", which is another bimap containing the same entries as this bimap but with reversed keys and values.

The BiMap.inverse method appears to return a Map with the values as the keys, and the keys as the values, so that Map can be used to call get on the value and retrieve a key.

In addition the Map returned by inverse is a view of the underlying data, so it does not have to make extra copies of the original data.

From the BiMap.inverse method documentation:

Returns the inverse view of this bimap, which maps each of this bimap's values to its associated key. The two bimaps are backed by the same data; any changes to one will appear in the other.


You can do a simple implementation like this. Please note that the data is not copied in this implementation. Only the references are ! I have added implementation for add and get. remove and other required method are left as exercise :)

public class TwoWayHashmap<K extends Object, V extends Object> {

  private Map<K,V> forward = new Hashtable<K, V>();
  private Map<V,K> backward = new Hashtable<V, K>();

  public synchronized void add(K key, V value) {
    forward.put(key, value);
    backward.put(value, key);
  }

  public synchronized V getForward(K key) {
    return forward.get(key);
  }

  public synchronized K getBackward(V key) {
    return backward.get(key);
  }
}

And ofcourse its applications responsibility to ensue even the 'values' are unique. Example usage:

TwoWayHashmap twmap = new TwoWayHashmap<String, String>();
twmap.add("aaa", "bbb");
twmap.add("xxx", "yyy");
System.out.println(twmap.getForward("xxx"));
System.out.println(twmap.getBackward("bbb"));


Apache Commons also includes the BidiMap (Bi Directional Map).

Defines a map that allows bidirectional lookup between key and values.

This extended Map represents a mapping where a key may lookup a value and a value may lookup a key with equal ease. This interface extends Map and so may be used anywhere a map is required. The interface provides an inverse map view, enabling full access to both directions of the BidiMap.


Google Guava has a BiMap that does what you want.


Using Guava,

    HashBiMap<String, String> map = HashBiMap.create();

    map.put("name", "Sohail");
    map.put("country", "Pakistan");

    Log.d("tag", "name is " + map.get("name"));


    BiMap<String, String>invmap= map.inverse();

    Log.d("tag", "Pakistan is a " + invmap.get("Pakistan"));

read complete tutorial here.


definitely w/o writing a ton of code → in lambda
from Your Map<String,Integer> map You get the inverted map by

Map<Integer,String> inverted = map.keySet().stream().collect(Collectors.toMap( s -> map.get( s ), s -> s ) );


Create a hashmap that maps Object to Object - then you can use the same map to store String -> Integer and Integer -> String.

When you add a string/int pair just add it both ways to the same map.

0

上一篇:

下一篇:

精彩评论

暂无评论...
验证码 换一张
取 消

最新问答

问答排行榜