Go Maps: Difference between revisions
Line 20: | Line 20: | ||
var mm [string]int | var mm [string]int | ||
</syntaxhighlight> | </syntaxhighlight> | ||
This declaration creates a [[#nil|<code>nil</code> map]]. | This declaration creates a [[#nil|<code>nil</code> map]]. Because <code>nil</code> maps cannot be written, this form has a limited usefulness. | ||
Inside functions, the [[Go_Variables#Short_Variable_Declaration|short variable declaration]] can be used with <code>[[#make|make()]]</code> or a [[#Composite_Literal|composite literal]]. | Inside functions, the [[Go_Variables#Short_Variable_Declaration|short variable declaration]] can be used with <code>[[#make|make()]]</code> or a [[#Composite_Literal|composite literal]]. |
Revision as of 00:12, 27 August 2024
External
Internal
Overview
Maps and Pass-by-Value
Pointers to Maps
nil and Empty Map
nil Map
Empty Map
Declaration and Initialization
A map can be declared with the long variable declaration.
var <mapVarName> map[<keyType>]<valueType>
var mm [string]int
This declaration creates a nil
map. Because nil
maps cannot be written, this form has a limited usefulness.
Inside functions, the short variable declaration can be used with make()
or a composite literal.
Initialization with make()
make()
allocates a the underlying data structures required by the map, and creates a new map header to describe it, all at once. Note that unlike new()
, make()
returns the map, not a pointer. The returned map is empty, but ready to use.
mm := make([string]int)
Initialization with a Composite Literal
Composite literals can be used for map initialization.
Long variable declaration and initialization with type inference:
var mm = map[string]int{"A": 1, "B": 2}
mm := map[string]int{"A": 1, "B": 2}
Operators
Indexing Operator []
Values stored in a map can be referenced with the indexing operator []
, using the [key]
syntax.
The indexing operator returns two values: a copy of the value associated with the key, or the zero-value for the map type if the key does not exist in map, and a boolean that says whether the key exists or not in the map.
The second returned value can be syntactically omitted, but given the fact that the indexing operator returns the zero value for the type and not nil
on missing keys, it is impossible to say without it whether the key is missing, or a zero-value was associated with the key.
mm := map[string]int{"A": 1, "B": 2}
v, ok := mm["A"]
fmt.Printf("%d, %t\n", v, ok) // will display 1, true
Idiom:
if v, ok := mm["A"]; ok {
// use the value
}
If the key does not exist in map, the retuned value is not nil
, but the zero value for the type.
The indexing operator can be used to change the value associated with a key, or to add a new key/value pair:
mm["A"] = 7
mm["C"] = 9
Map Functions
delete()
delete()
is a built-in function that deletes a key/value pair from the map:
mm := map[string]int{"A": 1, "B": 2}
delete(mm, "A")
If the key does not exist in the map, delete()
is a no-op.
len()
len()
is a built-in function that returns the number of keys in the map. Note that the built-in cap()
function does not work on maps. Unlike slices, maps do not have the concept of capacity.
make()
make()
is a built-in function that creates ready-to-use map. See Initialization with make() above.
new()
Iterating over a Map
Use the range
keyword.
for k, v := range mm {
fmt.Printf("%s=%d\n", k, v)
}
If we only want to iterate over keys and the values are not needed, this syntax is valid:
for k := range mm {
fmt.Printf("key: %s\n", k)
}