Difference between revisions of "Intermediate C++ Game Programming Tutorial 24"
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** For lookup, you can use square braces, <code>map[x]</code> will return a reference to the corresponding value | ** For lookup, you can use square braces, <code>map[x]</code> will return a reference to the corresponding value | ||
** Note: a lookup with a new key value will create that element in the map with the default constructed ValueType value | ** Note: a lookup with a new key value will create that element in the map with the default constructed ValueType value | ||
− | ** | + | ** <code>insert</code> or <code>emplace</code> with a key that already exists will NOT override the existing value: <code>std::map::emplace</code> returns a <code>std::pair<iterator,bool></code> where the bool inidicates whether an insertion took place |
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Revision as of 03:23, 20 January 2020
Associative containers are super useful, both as a convenient fast way to create dictionary or mapping for real-world problems like managing game resources, and as a data structure to help solve more abstract algorithmic computer science problems. And hash tables are fast as balls.
Contents
Topics Covered
Part 1
-
std::map
container interface - Binary tree data structure
-
std::map
key requirements (comparison) -
std::map
gotchas (std::remove_if
andconst
keys) -
std::set
-
std::multimap
andstd::multiset
Part 2
- Hash table performance vs. binary tree performance
- Hash table data structure
-
std::unordered_map
key requirements - Hash combining
-
std::unordered_map
bucket interface and hashing policy - When to choose
std::map
overstd::unordered_map
Video Timestamp Index
- The
std::map<KeyType,ValueType>
class 0:46
- Maps consist of keys to lookup (associated with) values
-
map.insert( {key,value} )
to insert (key,value) pairs -
map[key]
returns a reference to the ValueType for a KeyType
- The Binary tree data structure 2:46
-
std::map
performs lookup in O(log(n)), it uses a Binary tree data structure - Key properties of a Binary Tree (BT):
- - Nodes can have at most 2 children (hence: binary)
- - Each left child is smaller and each right child is larger than its parent
- - Insertion is done by navigating the tree along a route Left for smaller, Right for larger such that the order property always holds
- The big advantage of the BT properties is that retrieval is very fast
- The beauty of
std::map
is that we don't have to implement any of this; it's all there in the STL 7:00 - The STL implementation is further optimized, e.g. it uses a red-black tree for BT rebalancing
-
- A look at the
std::map
cppreference.com documentation 7:35
-
map.insert()
takes a pair typestd::pair<KeyType,ValueType>
, the Map's elements - C++ can deduce the pair Type, so
map.insert({keyX,valueXYZ});
with curly braces will do the job - An even better way to insert is through
map.emplace[]
operation; iit will construct the pair in-place. - For lookup, you can use square braces,
map[x]
will return a reference to the corresponding value - Note: a lookup with a new key value will create that element in the map with the default constructed ValueType value
-
insert
oremplace
with a key that already exists will NOT override the existing value:std::map::emplace
returns astd::pair<iterator,bool>
where the bool inidicates whether an insertion took place
-
- [WORK-IN-PROGRESS]
Homework Assignment
The homework for this video is to enable use of a custom datatype in unordered_map
hashing over multiple (4) members of that datatype. The solution video is here.