Creating a Hash Table : Map « Collections « Java Tutorial






import java.util.HashMap;
import java.util.Iterator;
import java.util.Map;
import java.util.TreeMap;

public class Main {
  public static void main(String[] argv) throws Exception {
    Map<String, Integer> map = new HashMap<String, Integer>();
    map = new TreeMap();

    map.put("a", new Integer(1));
    map.put("b", new Integer(2));
    map.put("c", new Integer(3));

    int size = map.size(); // 2

    Object oldValue = map.put("a", new Integer(9)); // 1

    oldValue = map.remove("c"); // 3

    Iterator it = map.keySet().iterator();
    while (it.hasNext()) {
      Object key = it.next();
    }

    it = map.values().iterator();
    while (it.hasNext()) {
      Object value = it.next();
    }
  }
}








9.25.Map
9.25.1.Creating and storing arrays in a map
9.25.2.Sort based on the values
9.25.3.Get a key from value with an HashMap
9.25.4.Retrieve environment variables (JDK1.5)
9.25.5.Creating a Type-Specific Map: creates a map whose keys are Integer objects and values are String objects.
9.25.6.A map declared to hold objects of a type T can also hold objects that extend from T
9.25.7.A value retrieved from a type-specific collection does not need to be casted
9.25.8.Map techniques.
9.25.9.Create an array containing the keys in a map
9.25.10.Create an array containing the values in a map
9.25.11.Creating a Hash Table
9.25.12.Creating a Map That Retains Order-of-Insertion
9.25.13.Automatically Removing an Unreferenced Element from a Hash Table
9.25.14.Creating a Type-Specific Map [5.0]
9.25.15.Create type specific collections
9.25.16.Convert Properties into Map