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tables.nim
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#
#
# Nim's Runtime Library
# (c) Copyright 2015 Andreas Rumpf
#
# See the file "copying.txt", included in this
# distribution, for details about the copyright.
#
## The `tables` module implements variants of an efficient `hash table`:idx:
## (also often named `dictionary`:idx: in other programming languages) that is
## a mapping from keys to values.
##
## There are several different types of hash tables available:
## * `Table<#Table>`_ is the usual hash table,
## * `OrderedTable<#OrderedTable>`_ is like `Table` but remembers insertion order,
## * `CountTable<#CountTable>`_ is a mapping from a key to its number of occurrences
##
## For consistency with every other data type in Nim these have **value**
## semantics, this means that `=` performs a copy of the hash table.
##
## For `ref semantics<manual.html#types-reference-and-pointer-types>`_
## use their `Ref` variants: `TableRef<#TableRef>`_,
## `OrderedTableRef<#OrderedTableRef>`_, and `CountTableRef<#CountTableRef>`_.
##
## To give an example, when `a` is a `Table`, then `var b = a` gives `b`
## as a new independent table. `b` is initialised with the contents of `a`.
## Changing `b` does not affect `a` and vice versa:
runnableExamples:
var
a = {1: "one", 2: "two"}.toTable # creates a Table
b = a
assert a == b
b[3] = "three"
assert 3 notin a
assert 3 in b
assert a != b
## On the other hand, when `a` is a `TableRef` instead, then changes to `b`
## also affect `a`. Both `a` and `b` **ref** the same data structure:
runnableExamples:
var
a = {1: "one", 2: "two"}.newTable # creates a TableRef
b = a
assert a == b
b[3] = "three"
assert 3 in a
assert 3 in b
assert a == b
##
## ----
##
## # Basic usage
## ## Table
runnableExamples:
from std/sequtils import zip
let
names = ["John", "Paul", "George", "Ringo"]
years = [1940, 1942, 1943, 1940]
var beatles = initTable[string, int]()
for pairs in zip(names, years):
let (name, birthYear) = pairs
beatles[name] = birthYear
assert beatles == {"George": 1943, "Ringo": 1940, "Paul": 1942, "John": 1940}.toTable
var beatlesByYear = initTable[int, seq[string]]()
for pairs in zip(years, names):
let (birthYear, name) = pairs
if not beatlesByYear.hasKey(birthYear):
# if a key doesn't exist, we create one with an empty sequence
# before we can add elements to it
beatlesByYear[birthYear] = @[]
beatlesByYear[birthYear].add(name)
assert beatlesByYear == {1940: @["John", "Ringo"], 1942: @["Paul"], 1943: @["George"]}.toTable
## ## OrderedTable
## `OrderedTable<#OrderedTable>`_ is used when it is important to preserve
## the insertion order of keys.
runnableExamples:
let
a = [('z', 1), ('y', 2), ('x', 3)]
ot = a.toOrderedTable # ordered tables
assert $ot == """{'z': 1, 'y': 2, 'x': 3}"""
## ## CountTable
## `CountTable<#CountTable>`_ is useful for counting number of items of some
## container (e.g. string, sequence or array), as it is a mapping where the
## items are the keys, and their number of occurrences are the values.
## For that purpose `toCountTable proc<#toCountTable,openArray[A]>`_
## comes handy:
runnableExamples:
let myString = "abracadabra"
let letterFrequencies = toCountTable(myString)
assert $letterFrequencies == "{'a': 5, 'd': 1, 'b': 2, 'r': 2, 'c': 1}"
## The same could have been achieved by manually iterating over a container
## and increasing each key's value with `inc proc
## <#inc,CountTable[A],A,int>`_:
runnableExamples:
let myString = "abracadabra"
var letterFrequencies = initCountTable[char]()
for c in myString:
letterFrequencies.inc(c)
assert $letterFrequencies == "{'d': 1, 'r': 2, 'c': 1, 'a': 5, 'b': 2}"
##
## ----
##
## ## Hashing
##
## If you are using simple standard types like `int` or `string` for the
## keys of the table you won't have any problems, but as soon as you try to use
## a more complex object as a key you will be greeted by a strange compiler
## error:
##
## Error: type mismatch: got (Person)
## but expected one of:
## hashes.hash(x: openArray[A]): Hash
## hashes.hash(x: int): Hash
## hashes.hash(x: float): Hash
##
## What is happening here is that the types used for table keys require to have
## a `hash()` proc which will convert them to a `Hash <hashes.html#Hash>`_
## value, and the compiler is listing all the hash functions it knows.
## Additionally there has to be a `==` operator that provides the same
## semantics as its corresponding `hash` proc.
##
## After you add `hash` and `==` for your custom type everything will work.
## Currently, however, `hash` for objects is not defined, whereas
## `system.==` for objects does exist and performs a "deep" comparison (every
## field is compared) which is usually what you want. So in the following
## example implementing only `hash` suffices:
runnableExamples:
import std/hashes
type
Person = object
firstName, lastName: string
proc hash(x: Person): Hash =
## Piggyback on the already available string hash proc.
##
## Without this proc nothing works!
result = x.firstName.hash !& x.lastName.hash
result = !$result
var
salaries = initTable[Person, int]()
p1, p2: Person
p1.firstName = "Jon"
p1.lastName = "Ross"
salaries[p1] = 30_000
p2.firstName = "소진"
p2.lastName = "박"
salaries[p2] = 45_000
##
## ----
##
## # See also
##
## * `json module<json.html>`_ for table-like structure which allows
## heterogeneous members
## * `strtabs module<strtabs.html>`_ for efficient hash tables
## mapping from strings to strings
## * `hashes module<hashes.html>`_ for helper functions for hashing
import std/private/since
import std/[hashes, math, algorithm]
when not defined(nimHasEffectsOf):
{.pragma: effectsOf.}
type
KeyValuePair[A, B] = tuple[hcode: Hash, key: A, val: B]
KeyValuePairSeq[A, B] = seq[KeyValuePair[A, B]]
Table*[A, B] = object
## Generic hash table, consisting of a key-value pair.
##
## `data` and `counter` are internal implementation details which
## can't be accessed.
##
## For creating an empty Table, use `initTable proc<#initTable>`_.
data: KeyValuePairSeq[A, B]
counter: int
TableRef*[A, B] = ref Table[A, B] ## Ref version of `Table<#Table>`_.
##
## For creating a new empty TableRef, use `newTable proc
## <#newTable>`_.
# ------------------------------ helpers ---------------------------------
# Do NOT move these to tableimpl.nim, because sharedtables uses that
# file and has its own implementation.
template maxHash(t): untyped = high(t.data)
template dataLen(t): untyped = len(t.data)
include tableimpl
proc raiseKeyError[T](key: T) {.noinline, noreturn.} =
when compiles($key):
raise newException(KeyError, "key not found: " & $key)
else:
raise newException(KeyError, "key not found")
template get(t, key): untyped =
## retrieves the value at `t[key]`. The value can be modified.
## If `key` is not in `t`, the `KeyError` exception is raised.
mixin rawGet
var hc: Hash
var index = rawGet(t, key, hc)
if index >= 0: result = t.data[index].val
else:
raiseKeyError(key)
proc enlarge[A, B](t: var Table[A, B]) =
var n: KeyValuePairSeq[A, B]
newSeq(n, len(t.data) * growthFactor)
swap(t.data, n)
for i in countup(0, high(n)):
let eh = n[i].hcode
if isFilled(eh):
var j: Hash = eh and maxHash(t)
while isFilled(t.data[j].hcode):
j = nextTry(j, maxHash(t))
when defined(js):
rawInsert(t, t.data, n[i].key, n[i].val, eh, j)
else:
rawInsert(t, t.data, move n[i].key, move n[i].val, eh, j)
# -------------------------------------------------------------------
# ------------------------------ Table ------------------------------
# -------------------------------------------------------------------
proc initTable*[A, B](initialSize = defaultInitialSize): Table[A, B] =
## Creates a new hash table that is empty.
##
## Starting from Nim v0.20, tables are initialized by default and it is
## not necessary to call this function explicitly.
##
## See also:
## * `toTable proc<#toTable,openArray[]>`_
## * `newTable proc<#newTable>`_ for creating a `TableRef`
runnableExamples:
let
a = initTable[int, string]()
b = initTable[char, seq[int]]()
result = default(Table[A, B])
initImpl(result, initialSize)
proc `[]=`*[A, B](t: var Table[A, B], key: A, val: sink B) =
## Inserts a `(key, value)` pair into `t`.
##
## See also:
## * `[] proc<#[],Table[A,B],A>`_ for retrieving a value of a key
## * `hasKeyOrPut proc<#hasKeyOrPut,Table[A,B],A,B>`_
## * `mgetOrPut proc<#mgetOrPut,Table[A,B],A,B>`_
## * `del proc<#del,Table[A,B],A>`_ for removing a key from the table
runnableExamples:
var a = initTable[char, int]()
a['x'] = 7
a['y'] = 33
doAssert a == {'x': 7, 'y': 33}.toTable
putImpl(enlarge)
proc toTable*[A, B](pairs: openArray[(A, B)]): Table[A, B] =
## Creates a new hash table that contains the given `pairs`.
##
## `pairs` is a container consisting of `(key, value)` tuples.
##
## See also:
## * `initTable proc<#initTable>`_
## * `newTable proc<#newTable,openArray[]>`_ for a `TableRef` version
runnableExamples:
let a = [('a', 5), ('b', 9)]
let b = toTable(a)
assert b == {'a': 5, 'b': 9}.toTable
result = initTable[A, B](pairs.len)
for key, val in items(pairs): result[key] = val
proc `[]`*[A, B](t: Table[A, B], key: A): lent B =
## Retrieves the value at `t[key]`.
##
## If `key` is not in `t`, the `KeyError` exception is raised.
## One can check with `hasKey proc<#hasKey,Table[A,B],A>`_ whether
## the key exists.
##
## See also:
## * `getOrDefault proc<#getOrDefault,Table[A,B],A>`_ to return
## a default value (e.g. zero for int) if the key doesn't exist
## * `getOrDefault proc<#getOrDefault,Table[A,B],A,B>`_ to return
## a custom value if the key doesn't exist
## * `[]= proc<#[]=,Table[A,B],A,sinkB>`_ for inserting a new
## (key, value) pair in the table
## * `hasKey proc<#hasKey,Table[A,B],A>`_ for checking if a key is in
## the table
runnableExamples:
let a = {'a': 5, 'b': 9}.toTable
doAssert a['a'] == 5
doAssertRaises(KeyError):
echo a['z']
get(t, key)
proc `[]`*[A, B](t: var Table[A, B], key: A): var B =
## Retrieves the value at `t[key]`. The value can be modified.
##
## If `key` is not in `t`, the `KeyError` exception is raised.
##
## See also:
## * `getOrDefault proc<#getOrDefault,Table[A,B],A>`_ to return
## a default value (e.g. zero for int) if the key doesn't exist
## * `getOrDefault proc<#getOrDefault,Table[A,B],A,B>`_ to return
## a custom value if the key doesn't exist
## * `[]= proc<#[]=,Table[A,B],A,sinkB>`_ for inserting a new
## (key, value) pair in the table
## * `hasKey proc<#hasKey,Table[A,B],A>`_ for checking if a key is in
## the table
get(t, key)
proc hasKey*[A, B](t: Table[A, B], key: A): bool =
## Returns true if `key` is in the table `t`.
##
## See also:
## * `contains proc<#contains,Table[A,B],A>`_ for use with the `in` operator
## * `[] proc<#[],Table[A,B],A>`_ for retrieving a value of a key
## * `getOrDefault proc<#getOrDefault,Table[A,B],A>`_ to return
## a default value (e.g. zero for int) if the key doesn't exist
## * `getOrDefault proc<#getOrDefault,Table[A,B],A,B>`_ to return
## a custom value if the key doesn't exist
runnableExamples:
let a = {'a': 5, 'b': 9}.toTable
doAssert a.hasKey('a') == true
doAssert a.hasKey('z') == false
var hc: Hash
result = rawGet(t, key, hc) >= 0
proc contains*[A, B](t: Table[A, B], key: A): bool =
## Alias of `hasKey proc<#hasKey,Table[A,B],A>`_ for use with
## the `in` operator.
runnableExamples:
let a = {'a': 5, 'b': 9}.toTable
doAssert 'b' in a == true
doAssert a.contains('z') == false
return hasKey[A, B](t, key)
proc hasKeyOrPut*[A, B](t: var Table[A, B], key: A, val: B): bool =
## Returns true if `key` is in the table, otherwise inserts `value`.
##
## See also:
## * `hasKey proc<#hasKey,Table[A,B],A>`_
## * `[] proc<#[],Table[A,B],A>`_ for retrieving a value of a key
## * `getOrDefault proc<#getOrDefault,Table[A,B],A>`_ to return
## a default value (e.g. zero for int) if the key doesn't exist
## * `getOrDefault proc<#getOrDefault,Table[A,B],A,B>`_ to return
## a custom value if the key doesn't exist
runnableExamples:
var a = {'a': 5, 'b': 9}.toTable
if a.hasKeyOrPut('a', 50):
a['a'] = 99
if a.hasKeyOrPut('z', 50):
a['z'] = 99
doAssert a == {'a': 99, 'b': 9, 'z': 50}.toTable
hasKeyOrPutImpl(enlarge)
proc getOrDefault*[A, B](t: Table[A, B], key: A): B =
## Retrieves the value at `t[key]` if `key` is in `t`. Otherwise, the
## default initialization value for type `B` is returned (e.g. 0 for any
## integer type).
##
## See also:
## * `[] proc<#[],Table[A,B],A>`_ for retrieving a value of a key
## * `hasKey proc<#hasKey,Table[A,B],A>`_
## * `hasKeyOrPut proc<#hasKeyOrPut,Table[A,B],A,B>`_
## * `mgetOrPut proc<#mgetOrPut,Table[A,B],A,B>`_
## * `getOrDefault proc<#getOrDefault,Table[A,B],A,B>`_ to return
## a custom value if the key doesn't exist
runnableExamples:
let a = {'a': 5, 'b': 9}.toTable
doAssert a.getOrDefault('a') == 5
doAssert a.getOrDefault('z') == 0
result = default(B)
getOrDefaultImpl(t, key)
proc getOrDefault*[A, B](t: Table[A, B], key: A, default: B): B =
## Retrieves the value at `t[key]` if `key` is in `t`.
## Otherwise, `default` is returned.
##
## See also:
## * `[] proc<#[],Table[A,B],A>`_ for retrieving a value of a key
## * `hasKey proc<#hasKey,Table[A,B],A>`_
## * `hasKeyOrPut proc<#hasKeyOrPut,Table[A,B],A,B>`_
## * `mgetOrPut proc<#mgetOrPut,Table[A,B],A,B>`_
## * `getOrDefault proc<#getOrDefault,Table[A,B],A>`_ to return
## a default value (e.g. zero for int) if the key doesn't exist
runnableExamples:
let a = {'a': 5, 'b': 9}.toTable
doAssert a.getOrDefault('a', 99) == 5
doAssert a.getOrDefault('z', 99) == 99
result = default(B)
getOrDefaultImpl(t, key, default)
proc mgetOrPut*[A, B](t: var Table[A, B], key: A, val: B): var B =
## Retrieves value at `t[key]` or puts `val` if not present, either way
## returning a value which can be modified.
##
##
## Note that while the value returned is of type `var B`,
## it is easy to accidentally create a copy of the value at `t[key]`.
## Remember that seqs and strings are value types, and therefore
## cannot be copied into a separate variable for modification.
## See the example below.
##
## See also:
## * `[] proc<#[],Table[A,B],A>`_ for retrieving a value of a key
## * `hasKey proc<#hasKey,Table[A,B],A>`_
## * `hasKeyOrPut proc<#hasKeyOrPut,Table[A,B],A,B>`_
## * `getOrDefault proc<#getOrDefault,Table[A,B],A>`_ to return
## a default value (e.g. zero for int) if the key doesn't exist
## * `getOrDefault proc<#getOrDefault,Table[A,B],A,B>`_ to return
## a custom value if the key doesn't exist
runnableExamples:
var a = {'a': 5, 'b': 9}.toTable
doAssert a.mgetOrPut('a', 99) == 5
doAssert a.mgetOrPut('z', 99) == 99
doAssert a == {'a': 5, 'b': 9, 'z': 99}.toTable
# An example of accidentally creating a copy
var t = initTable[int, seq[int]]()
# In this example, we expect t[10] to be modified,
# but it is not.
var copiedSeq = t.mgetOrPut(10, @[10])
copiedSeq.add(20)
doAssert t[10] == @[10]
# Correct
t.mgetOrPut(25, @[25]).add(35)
doAssert t[25] == @[25, 35]
mgetOrPutImpl(enlarge)
proc mgetOrPut*[A, B](t: var Table[A, B], key: A): var B =
## Retrieves the value at `t[key]` or puts the
## default initialization value for type `B` (e.g. 0 for any
## integer type).
runnableExamples:
var a = {'a': 5}.newTable
doAssert a.mgetOrPut('a') == 5
a.mgetOrPut('z').inc
doAssert a == {'a': 5, 'z': 1}.newTable
mgetOrPutImpl(enlarge)
proc len*[A, B](t: Table[A, B]): int =
## Returns the number of keys in `t`.
runnableExamples:
let a = {'a': 5, 'b': 9}.toTable
doAssert len(a) == 2
result = t.counter
proc add*[A, B](t: var Table[A, B], key: A, val: sink B) {.deprecated:
"Deprecated since v1.4; it was more confusing than useful, use `[]=`".} =
## Puts a new `(key, value)` pair into `t` even if `t[key]` already exists.
##
## **This can introduce duplicate keys into the table!**
##
## Use `[]= proc<#[]=,Table[A,B],A,sinkB>`_ for inserting a new
## (key, value) pair in the table without introducing duplicates.
addImpl(enlarge)
template tabMakeEmpty(i) = t.data[i].hcode = 0
template tabCellEmpty(i) = isEmpty(t.data[i].hcode)
template tabCellHash(i) = t.data[i].hcode
proc del*[A, B](t: var Table[A, B], key: A) =
## Deletes `key` from hash table `t`. Does nothing if the key does not exist.
##
## .. warning:: If duplicate keys were added (via the now deprecated `add` proc),
## this may need to be called multiple times.
##
## See also:
## * `pop proc<#pop,Table[A,B],A,B>`_
## * `clear proc<#clear,Table[A,B]>`_ to empty the whole table
runnableExamples:
var a = {'a': 5, 'b': 9, 'c': 13}.toTable
a.del('a')
doAssert a == {'b': 9, 'c': 13}.toTable
a.del('z')
doAssert a == {'b': 9, 'c': 13}.toTable
delImpl(tabMakeEmpty, tabCellEmpty, tabCellHash)
proc pop*[A, B](t: var Table[A, B], key: A, val: var B): bool =
## Deletes the `key` from the table.
## Returns `true`, if the `key` existed, and sets `val` to the
## mapping of the key. Otherwise, returns `false`, and the `val` is
## unchanged.
##
## .. warning:: If duplicate keys were added (via the now deprecated `add` proc),
## this may need to be called multiple times.
##
## See also:
## * `del proc<#del,Table[A,B],A>`_
## * `clear proc<#clear,Table[A,B]>`_ to empty the whole table
runnableExamples:
var
a = {'a': 5, 'b': 9, 'c': 13}.toTable
i: int
doAssert a.pop('b', i) == true
doAssert a == {'a': 5, 'c': 13}.toTable
doAssert i == 9
i = 0
doAssert a.pop('z', i) == false
doAssert a == {'a': 5, 'c': 13}.toTable
doAssert i == 0
var hc: Hash
var index = rawGet(t, key, hc)
result = index >= 0
if result:
val = move(t.data[index].val)
delImplIdx(t, index, tabMakeEmpty, tabCellEmpty, tabCellHash)
proc take*[A, B](t: var Table[A, B], key: A, val: var B): bool {.inline.} =
## Alias for:
## * `pop proc<#pop,Table[A,B],A,B>`_
pop(t, key, val)
proc clear*[A, B](t: var Table[A, B]) =
## Resets the table so that it is empty.
##
## See also:
## * `del proc<#del,Table[A,B],A>`_
## * `pop proc<#pop,Table[A,B],A,B>`_
runnableExamples:
var a = {'a': 5, 'b': 9, 'c': 13}.toTable
doAssert len(a) == 3
clear(a)
doAssert len(a) == 0
clearImpl()
proc `$`*[A, B](t: Table[A, B]): string =
## The `$` operator for hash tables. Used internally when calling `echo`
## on a table.
dollarImpl()
proc `==`*[A, B](s, t: Table[A, B]): bool =
## The `==` operator for hash tables. Returns `true` if the content of both
## tables contains the same key-value pairs. Insert order does not matter.
runnableExamples:
let
a = {'a': 5, 'b': 9, 'c': 13}.toTable
b = {'b': 9, 'c': 13, 'a': 5}.toTable
doAssert a == b
equalsImpl(s, t)
proc indexBy*[A, B, C](collection: A, index: proc(x: B): C): Table[C, B] =
## Index the collection with the proc provided.
# TODO: As soon as supported, change collection: A to collection: A[B]
result = initTable[C, B]()
for item in collection:
result[index(item)] = item
template withValue*[A, B](t: var Table[A, B], key: A, value, body: untyped) =
## Retrieves the value at `t[key]`.
##
## `value` can be modified in the scope of the `withValue` call.
runnableExamples:
type
User = object
name: string
uid: int
var t = initTable[int, User]()
let u = User(name: "Hello", uid: 99)
t[1] = u
t.withValue(1, value):
# block is executed only if `key` in `t`
value.name = "Nim"
value.uid = 1314
t.withValue(2, value):
value.name = "No"
value.uid = 521
assert t[1].name == "Nim"
assert t[1].uid == 1314
mixin rawGet
var hc: Hash
var index = rawGet(t, key, hc)
let hasKey = index >= 0
if hasKey:
var value {.inject.} = addr(t.data[index].val)
body
template withValue*[A, B](t: var Table[A, B], key: A,
value, body1, body2: untyped) =
## Retrieves the value at `t[key]`.
##
## `value` can be modified in the scope of the `withValue` call.
runnableExamples:
type
User = object
name: string
uid: int
var t = initTable[int, User]()
let u = User(name: "Hello", uid: 99)
t[1] = u
t.withValue(1, value):
# block is executed only if `key` in `t`
value.name = "Nim"
value.uid = 1314
t.withValue(521, value):
doAssert false
do:
# block is executed when `key` not in `t`
t[1314] = User(name: "exist", uid: 521)
assert t[1].name == "Nim"
assert t[1].uid == 1314
assert t[1314].name == "exist"
assert t[1314].uid == 521
mixin rawGet
var hc: Hash
var index = rawGet(t, key, hc)
let hasKey = index >= 0
if hasKey:
var value {.inject.} = addr(t.data[index].val)
body1
else:
body2
iterator pairs*[A, B](t: Table[A, B]): (A, B) =
## Iterates over any `(key, value)` pair in the table `t`.
##
## See also:
## * `mpairs iterator<#mpairs.i,Table[A,B]>`_
## * `keys iterator<#keys.i,Table[A,B]>`_
## * `values iterator<#values.i,Table[A,B]>`_
##
## **Examples:**
##
## ```Nim
## let a = {
## 'o': [1, 5, 7, 9],
## 'e': [2, 4, 6, 8]
## }.toTable
##
## for k, v in a.pairs:
## echo "key: ", k
## echo "value: ", v
##
## # key: e
## # value: [2, 4, 6, 8]
## # key: o
## # value: [1, 5, 7, 9]
## ```
let L = len(t)
for h in 0 .. high(t.data):
if isFilled(t.data[h].hcode):
yield (t.data[h].key, t.data[h].val)
assert(len(t) == L, "the length of the table changed while iterating over it")
iterator mpairs*[A, B](t: var Table[A, B]): (A, var B) =
## Iterates over any `(key, value)` pair in the table `t` (must be
## declared as `var`). The values can be modified.
##
## See also:
## * `pairs iterator<#pairs.i,Table[A,B]>`_
## * `mvalues iterator<#mvalues.i,Table[A,B]>`_
runnableExamples:
var a = {
'o': @[1, 5, 7, 9],
'e': @[2, 4, 6, 8]
}.toTable
for k, v in a.mpairs:
v.add(v[0] + 10)
doAssert a == {'e': @[2, 4, 6, 8, 12], 'o': @[1, 5, 7, 9, 11]}.toTable
let L = len(t)
for h in 0 .. high(t.data):
if isFilled(t.data[h].hcode):
yield (t.data[h].key, t.data[h].val)
assert(len(t) == L, "the length of the table changed while iterating over it")
iterator keys*[A, B](t: Table[A, B]): lent A =
## Iterates over any key in the table `t`.
##
## See also:
## * `pairs iterator<#pairs.i,Table[A,B]>`_
## * `values iterator<#values.i,Table[A,B]>`_
runnableExamples:
var a = {
'o': @[1, 5, 7, 9],
'e': @[2, 4, 6, 8]
}.toTable
for k in a.keys:
a[k].add(99)
doAssert a == {'e': @[2, 4, 6, 8, 99], 'o': @[1, 5, 7, 9, 99]}.toTable
let L = len(t)
for h in 0 .. high(t.data):
if isFilled(t.data[h].hcode):
yield t.data[h].key
assert(len(t) == L, "the length of the table changed while iterating over it")
iterator values*[A, B](t: Table[A, B]): lent B =
## Iterates over any value in the table `t`.
##
## See also:
## * `pairs iterator<#pairs.i,Table[A,B]>`_
## * `keys iterator<#keys.i,Table[A,B]>`_
## * `mvalues iterator<#mvalues.i,Table[A,B]>`_
runnableExamples:
let a = {
'o': @[1, 5, 7, 9],
'e': @[2, 4, 6, 8]
}.toTable
for v in a.values:
doAssert v.len == 4
let L = len(t)
for h in 0 .. high(t.data):
if isFilled(t.data[h].hcode):
yield t.data[h].val
assert(len(t) == L, "the length of the table changed while iterating over it")
iterator mvalues*[A, B](t: var Table[A, B]): var B =
## Iterates over any value in the table `t` (must be
## declared as `var`). The values can be modified.
##
## See also:
## * `mpairs iterator<#mpairs.i,Table[A,B]>`_
## * `values iterator<#values.i,Table[A,B]>`_
runnableExamples:
var a = {
'o': @[1, 5, 7, 9],
'e': @[2, 4, 6, 8]
}.toTable
for v in a.mvalues:
v.add(99)
doAssert a == {'e': @[2, 4, 6, 8, 99], 'o': @[1, 5, 7, 9, 99]}.toTable
let L = len(t)
for h in 0 .. high(t.data):
if isFilled(t.data[h].hcode):
yield t.data[h].val
assert(len(t) == L, "the length of the table changed while iterating over it")
iterator allValues*[A, B](t: Table[A, B]; key: A): B {.deprecated:
"Deprecated since v1.4; tables with duplicated keys are deprecated".} =
## Iterates over any value in the table `t` that belongs to the given `key`.
##
## Used if you have a table with duplicate keys (as a result of using
## `add proc<#add,Table[A,B],A,sinkB>`_).
##
runnableExamples:
import std/[sequtils, algorithm]
var a = {'a': 3, 'b': 5}.toTable
for i in 1..3: a.add('z', 10*i)
doAssert toSeq(a.pairs).sorted == @[('a', 3), ('b', 5), ('z', 10), ('z', 20), ('z', 30)]
doAssert sorted(toSeq(a.allValues('z'))) == @[10, 20, 30]
var h: Hash = genHash(key) and high(t.data)
let L = len(t)
while isFilled(t.data[h].hcode):
if t.data[h].key == key:
yield t.data[h].val
assert(len(t) == L, "the length of the table changed while iterating over it")
h = nextTry(h, high(t.data))
# -------------------------------------------------------------------
# ---------------------------- TableRef -----------------------------
# -------------------------------------------------------------------
proc newTable*[A, B](initialSize = defaultInitialSize): TableRef[A, B] =
## Creates a new ref hash table that is empty.
##
## See also:
## * `newTable proc<#newTable,openArray[]>`_ for creating a `TableRef`
## from a collection of `(key, value)` pairs
## * `initTable proc<#initTable>`_ for creating a `Table`
runnableExamples:
let
a = newTable[int, string]()
b = newTable[char, seq[int]]()
new(result)
{.noSideEffect.}:
result[] = initTable[A, B](initialSize)
proc newTable*[A, B](pairs: openArray[(A, B)]): TableRef[A, B] =
## Creates a new ref hash table that contains the given `pairs`.
##
## `pairs` is a container consisting of `(key, value)` tuples.
##
## See also:
## * `newTable proc<#newTable>`_
## * `toTable proc<#toTable,openArray[]>`_ for a `Table` version
runnableExamples:
let a = [('a', 5), ('b', 9)]
let b = newTable(a)
assert b == {'a': 5, 'b': 9}.newTable
new(result)
{.noSideEffect.}:
result[] = toTable[A, B](pairs)
proc newTableFrom*[A, B, C](collection: A, index: proc(x: B): C): TableRef[C, B] =
## Index the collection with the proc provided.
# TODO: As soon as supported, change collection: A to collection: A[B]
result = newTable[C, B]()
{.noSideEffect.}:
for item in collection:
result[index(item)] = item
proc `[]`*[A, B](t: TableRef[A, B], key: A): var B =
## Retrieves the value at `t[key]`.
##
## If `key` is not in `t`, the `KeyError` exception is raised.
## One can check with `hasKey proc<#hasKey,TableRef[A,B],A>`_ whether
## the key exists.
##
## See also:
## * `getOrDefault proc<#getOrDefault,TableRef[A,B],A>`_ to return
## a default value (e.g. zero for int) if the key doesn't exist
## * `getOrDefault proc<#getOrDefault,TableRef[A,B],A,B>`_ to return
## a custom value if the key doesn't exist
## * `[]= proc<#[]=,TableRef[A,B],A,sinkB>`_ for inserting a new
## (key, value) pair in the table
## * `hasKey proc<#hasKey,TableRef[A,B],A>`_ for checking if a key is in
## the table
runnableExamples:
let a = {'a': 5, 'b': 9}.newTable
doAssert a['a'] == 5
doAssertRaises(KeyError):
echo a['z']
result = t[][key]
proc `[]=`*[A, B](t: TableRef[A, B], key: A, val: sink B) =
## Inserts a `(key, value)` pair into `t`.
##
## See also:
## * `[] proc<#[],TableRef[A,B],A>`_ for retrieving a value of a key
## * `hasKeyOrPut proc<#hasKeyOrPut,TableRef[A,B],A,B>`_
## * `mgetOrPut proc<#mgetOrPut,TableRef[A,B],A,B>`_
## * `del proc<#del,TableRef[A,B],A>`_ for removing a key from the table
runnableExamples:
var a = newTable[char, int]()
a['x'] = 7
a['y'] = 33
doAssert a == {'x': 7, 'y': 33}.newTable
t[][key] = val
proc hasKey*[A, B](t: TableRef[A, B], key: A): bool =
## Returns true if `key` is in the table `t`.
##
## See also:
## * `contains proc<#contains,TableRef[A,B],A>`_ for use with the `in`
## operator
## * `[] proc<#[],TableRef[A,B],A>`_ for retrieving a value of a key
## * `getOrDefault proc<#getOrDefault,TableRef[A,B],A>`_ to return
## a default value (e.g. zero for int) if the key doesn't exist
## * `getOrDefault proc<#getOrDefault,TableRef[A,B],A,B>`_ to return
## a custom value if the key doesn't exist
runnableExamples:
let a = {'a': 5, 'b': 9}.newTable
doAssert a.hasKey('a') == true
doAssert a.hasKey('z') == false
result = t[].hasKey(key)
proc contains*[A, B](t: TableRef[A, B], key: A): bool =
## Alias of `hasKey proc<#hasKey,TableRef[A,B],A>`_ for use with
## the `in` operator.
runnableExamples:
let a = {'a': 5, 'b': 9}.newTable
doAssert 'b' in a == true
doAssert a.contains('z') == false
return hasKey[A, B](t, key)
proc hasKeyOrPut*[A, B](t: TableRef[A, B], key: A, val: B): bool =
## Returns true if `key` is in the table, otherwise inserts `value`.
##
## See also:
## * `hasKey proc<#hasKey,TableRef[A,B],A>`_
## * `[] proc<#[],TableRef[A,B],A>`_ for retrieving a value of a key
## * `getOrDefault proc<#getOrDefault,TableRef[A,B],A>`_ to return
## a default value (e.g. zero for int) if the key doesn't exist
## * `getOrDefault proc<#getOrDefault,TableRef[A,B],A,B>`_ to return
## a custom value if the key doesn't exist
runnableExamples:
var a = {'a': 5, 'b': 9}.newTable
if a.hasKeyOrPut('a', 50):
a['a'] = 99
if a.hasKeyOrPut('z', 50):
a['z'] = 99
doAssert a == {'a': 99, 'b': 9, 'z': 50}.newTable
t[].hasKeyOrPut(key, val)
proc getOrDefault*[A, B](t: TableRef[A, B], key: A): B =
## Retrieves the value at `t[key]` if `key` is in `t`. Otherwise, the
## default initialization value for type `B` is returned (e.g. 0 for any
## integer type).
##
## See also:
## * `[] proc<#[],TableRef[A,B],A>`_ for retrieving a value of a key
## * `hasKey proc<#hasKey,TableRef[A,B],A>`_
## * `hasKeyOrPut proc<#hasKeyOrPut,TableRef[A,B],A,B>`_
## * `mgetOrPut proc<#mgetOrPut,TableRef[A,B],A,B>`_
## * `getOrDefault proc<#getOrDefault,TableRef[A,B],A,B>`_ to return
## a custom value if the key doesn't exist
runnableExamples:
let a = {'a': 5, 'b': 9}.newTable
doAssert a.getOrDefault('a') == 5
doAssert a.getOrDefault('z') == 0
getOrDefault(t[], key)
proc getOrDefault*[A, B](t: TableRef[A, B], key: A, default: B): B =
## Retrieves the value at `t[key]` if `key` is in `t`.
## Otherwise, `default` is returned.
##
## See also:
## * `[] proc<#[],TableRef[A,B],A>`_ for retrieving a value of a key
## * `hasKey proc<#hasKey,TableRef[A,B],A>`_
## * `hasKeyOrPut proc<#hasKeyOrPut,TableRef[A,B],A,B>`_
## * `mgetOrPut proc<#mgetOrPut,TableRef[A,B],A,B>`_
## * `getOrDefault proc<#getOrDefault,TableRef[A,B],A>`_ to return
## a default value (e.g. zero for int) if the key doesn't exist
runnableExamples:
let a = {'a': 5, 'b': 9}.newTable
doAssert a.getOrDefault('a', 99) == 5
doAssert a.getOrDefault('z', 99) == 99
getOrDefault(t[], key, default)
proc mgetOrPut*[A, B](t: TableRef[A, B], key: A, val: B): var B =
## Retrieves value at `t[key]` or puts `val` if not present, either way
## returning a value which can be modified.
##
## Note that while the value returned is of type `var B`,
## it is easy to accidentally create an copy of the value at `t[key]`.
## Remember that seqs and strings are value types, and therefore
## cannot be copied into a separate variable for modification.