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Associative Containers Sets and Maps. Section 4.8. Generic Associative Containers. A generic container C C is a template class for any proper type T C<T> is capable of storing arbitrary number of T objects A container that is organized and accessible by value
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Associative ContainersSets and Maps • Section 4.8
Generic Associative Containers • A generic container C • C is a template class for any proper type T • C<T> is capable of storing arbitrary number of T objects • A container that is organized and accessible by value • Client may insert or remove any T object in C<T> • Client may not determine position in C<T> • Positional details left to implementation • The order of elements in container is independent of the order in which they are inserted into container • “aContainer” for short • Bidirectional Iterators • Both ++ and -- operations are supported
Multimodal vs. Unimodal Associative Containers • Multimodal associative container • Duplicate elements are allowed • Insert operations always increase size by 1 • Unimodal associative container • Duplicate elements not allowed • Insert operations have dual personality • If t is not in C, then Insert(t) • If t is in C, then overwrite the existing t
The Pair Template • A class that holds a pair of items (may be of different types) template <typename T1, typename T2> class Pair { public: T1 first; T2 second; Pair() {}; Pair(const T1& t1, const T2& t2): first(t1), second(t2) {}; }; • Examples • Pair<int, int> pair1; • Pair<string, int> pair2; • C++/STL • #include <utility> • pair<int, int> pair1 • pair<string, int> pair2
Sets • Sorted associative containers • Set • A sorted associative container that does not allow duplicates • Stores objects • Unimodal: duplicate objects not allowed
The STL Set Template • set() // Creates an empty set. • set(const key_compare& comp) //Creates an empty set, use comp for key comparison • pair<iterator, bool> insert(const value_type& x) • iterator insert(iterator pos, const value_type& x) • Inserts x into the set, using pos as a hint to where it will be inserted. • void erase(iterator pos) • Erases the element pointed to by pos. • size_type erase(const key_type& k) • Erases the element whose key is k • void erase(iterator first, iterator last) • Erases all elements in a range • iterator find(const key_type& k) const • Finds an element whose key is k • Logarithmic complexity for insertion, remove, search
Example Set Clients • Inventory struct StockItem { // barcode, name, amount }; void print_inventory(std::ostream &os, const set<StockItem>& inventory) { set<StockItem>::iterator I; for (I = inventory.begin(); I != inventory.end(); ++I) { os << *I; } } • Customer accounts class Customer { // ssn, account_number, last_name, first_name… }; int main() { set<Customer> customers; }
Maps • Associative container that associates objects of type Key with objects of type Data • Sorted according to keys • Map • Stores (key, object) pairs • Unimodal: duplicate keys not allowed • AKA: table, associative array
The STL Map Template • map() • map(const key_compare& comp) • pair<iterator, bool> insert(const value_type& x) • Inserts x into the map • iterator insert(iterator pos, const value_type& x) • Inserts x into the map, using pos as a hint to where it will be inserted • void insert(iterator, iterator) • Inserts a range into the map
STL Map Template • void erase(iterator pos) • Erases the element pointed to by pos • size_type erase(const key_type& k) • Erases the element whose key is k • void erase(iterator first, iterator last) • Erases all elements in a range • iterator find(const key_type& k) • Finds an element whose key is k. • data_type& operator[](const key_type& k) • Returns a reference to the object that is associated with a particular key. • If the map does not already contain such an object, operator[] inserts the default object data_type()
struct ltstr { bool operator()(const char* s1, const char* s2) const { return strcmp(s1, s2) < 0; } }; typedef map<const char*, int, ltstr> MAP; Typedef MAP::iterator ITR; int main() { MAP months; months["january"] = 31; months["february"] = 28; months["march"] = 31; months["april"] = 30; months["may"] = 31; months["june"] = 30; months["july"] = 31; months["august"] = 31; months["september"] = 30; months["october"] = 31; months["november"] = 30; months["december"] = 31; cout << "june: " << months["june"] << endl; ITR cur = months.find("june"); ITR prev = cur; ITR next = cur; ++next; --prev; cout << "Previous (in alphabetical order) is " << (*prev).first << “: “ << (*prev).second << endl; cout << "Next (in alphabetical order) is " << next->first “: “ << next->second << endl; } Map Usage Example