class Hash(K, V)

Overview

A Hash represents a collection of key-value mappings, similar to a dictionary.

Main operations are storing a key-value mapping (#[]=) and querying the value associated to a key (#[]). Key-value mappings can also be deleted (#delete). Keys are unique within a hash. When adding a key-value mapping with a key that is already in use, the old value will be forgotten.

# Create a new Hash for mapping String to Int32
hash = Hash(String, Int32).new
hash["one"] = 1
hash["two"] = 2
hash["one"] # => 1

Hash literals can also be used to create a Hash:

{"one" => 1, "two" => 2}

Implementation is based on an open hash table. Two objects refer to the same hash key when their hash value (Object#hash) is identical and both objects are equal to each other (Object#==).

Enumeration follows the order that the corresponding keys were inserted.

NOTE When using mutable data types as keys, changing the value of a key after it was inserted into the Hash may lead to undefined behaviour. This can be restored by re-indexing the hash with #rehash.

Included Modules

Defined in:

py2cr/hash.cr

Instance Method Summary

Instance methods inherited from module Enumerable({K, V})

py_all? py_all?, py_any? py_any?, py_each(&block : {K, V} -> _) py_each

Instance Method Detail

def py_each(&) #

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def py_in?(element) #

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