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map

A type-safe generic hashmap implementation for C.

Installation

The map.c and map.h files can be dropped into an existing C project and compiled along with it.

Usage

Before using a map it should first be initialised using the map_init() function.

map_int_t m;
map_init(&m);

Values can added to a map using the map_set() function.

map_set(&m, "testkey", 123);

To retrieve a value from a map, the map_get() function can be used. map_get() will return a pointer to the key's value, or NULL if no mapping for that key exists.

int *val = map_get(&m, "testkey");
if (val) {
  printf("value: %d\n", *val);
} else {
  printf("value not found\n");
}

When you are done with a map the map_deinit() function should be called on it. This will free any memory the map allocated during use.

map_deinit(&m);

Types

map.h provides the following predefined map types:

Contained TypeType name
void*map_void_t
char*map_str_t
intmap_int_t
charmap_char_t
floatmap_float_t
doublemap_double_t

To define a new map type the map_t() macro should be used:

/* Creates the type uint_map_t for storing unsigned ints */
typedef map_t(unsigned int) uint_map_t;

Functions

All map functions are macro functions. The parameter m in each function should be a pointer to the map struct which the operation is to be performed on. The key parameter should always be a string value.

map_t(T)

Creates a map struct for containing values of type T.

/* Typedefs the struct `fp_map_t` as a container for type FILE* */
typedef map_t(FILE*) fp_map_t;

map_init(m)

Initialises the map, this must be called before the map can be used.

map_deinit(m)

Deinitialises the map, freeing the memory the map allocated during use; this should be called when we're finished with a map.

map_get(m, key)

Returns a pointer to the value of the given key. If no mapping for the key exists then NULL will be returned.

map_set(m, key, value)

Sets the given key to the given value. Returns 0 on success, otherwise -1 is returned and the map remains unchanged.

map_remove(m, key)

Removes the mapping of the given key from the map. If the key does not exist in the map then the function has no effect.

map_iter(m)

Returns a map_iter_t which can be used with map_next() to iterate all the keys in the map.

map_next(m, iter)

Uses the map_iter_t returned by map_iter() to iterate all the keys in the map. map_next() returns a key with each call and returns NULL when there are no more keys.

const char *key;
map_iter_t iter = map_iter(&m);

while ((key = map_next(&m, &iter))) {
  printf("%s -> %d", key, *map_get(&m, key));
}

License

This library is free software; you can redistribute it and/or modify it under the terms of the MIT license. See LICENSE for details.