Reputation: 24645
I need PHP object similar to HashMap in Java, but I didn't find when I googled, so if someone knows how I can mimic HashMaps in PHP, help would be appreciated.
Upvotes: 101
Views: 150509
Reputation: 51
You could create a custom HashMap class for that in php. example as shown below containing the basic HashMap attributes such as get and set.
class HashMap{
public $arr;
function init() {
function populate() {
return null;
}
// change to 999 for efficiency
$this->arr = array_map('populate', range(0, 9));
return $this->arr;
}
function get_hash($key) {
$hash = 0;
for ($i=0; $i < strlen($key) ; $i++) {
$hash += ord($key[$i]);
}
// arr index starts from 0
$hash_idx = $hash % (count($this->arr) - 1);
return $hash_idx;
}
function add($key, $value) {
$idx = $this->get_hash($key);
if ($this->arr[$idx] == null) {
$this->arr[$idx] = [$value];
} else{
$found = false;
$content = $this->arr[$idx];
$content_idx = 0;
foreach ($content as $item) {
// checking if they have same number of streams
if ($item == $value) {
$content[$content_idx] = [$value];
$found = true;
break;
}
$content_idx++;
}
if (!$found) {
// $value is already an array
array_push($content, $value);
// updating the array
$this->arr[$idx] = $content;
}
}
return $this->arr;
}
function get($key) {
$idx = $this->get_hash($key);
$content = $this->arr[$idx];
foreach ($content as $item) {
if ($item[1] == $key) {
return $item;
break;
}
}
}
}
Hope this was useful
Upvotes: 0
Reputation: 154101
Open a phpsh terminal:
php> $myhashmap = array();
php> $myhashmap['mykey1'] = 'myvalue1';
php> $myhashmap['mykey2'] = 'myvalue2';
php> echo $myhashmap['mykey2'];
myvalue2
The complexity of the $myhashmap['mykey2']
in this case appears to be constant time O(1), meaning that as the size of $myhasmap approaches infinity, the amount of time it takes to retrieve a value given a key stays the same.
Evidence the php array read is constant time:
Run this through the PHP interpreter:
php> for($x = 0; $x < 1000000000; $x++){
... $myhashmap[$x] = $x . " derp";
... }
The loop adds 1 billion key/values, it takes about 2 minutes to add them all to the hashmap which may exhaust your memory.
Then see how long it takes to do a lookup:
php> system('date +%N');echo " " . $myhashmap[10333] . " ";system('date +%N');
786946389 10333 derp 789008364
So how fast is the PHP array map lookup?
The 10333
is the key we looked up. 1 million nanoseconds == 1 millisecond. The amount of time it takes to get a value from a key is 2.06 million nanoseconds or about 2 milliseconds. About the same amount of time if the array were empty. This looks like constant time to me.
Upvotes: 46
Reputation: 541
Depending on what you want you might be interested in the SPL Object Storage class.
http://php.net/manual/en/class.splobjectstorage.php
It lets you use objects as keys, has an interface to count, get the hash and other goodies.
$s = new SplObjectStorage;
$o1 = new stdClass;
$o2 = new stdClass;
$o2->foo = 'bar';
$s[$o1] = 'baz';
$s[$o2] = 'bingo';
echo $s[$o1]; // 'baz'
echo $s[$o2]; // 'bingo'
Upvotes: 44
Reputation: 1787
You can make a simple hashMap yourself. What a hashMap does is storing items in a array using the hash as index/key. Hash-functions give collisions once in a while (not often, but they may do), so you have to store multiple items for an entry in the hashMap. That simple is a hashMap:
class IEqualityComparer {
public function equals($x, $y) {
throw new Exception("Not implemented!");
}
public function getHashCode($obj) {
throw new Exception("Not implemented!");
}
}
class HashMap {
private $map = array();
private $comparer;
public function __construct(IEqualityComparer $keyComparer) {
$this->comparer = $keyComparer;
}
public function has($key) {
$hash = $this->comparer->getHashCode($key);
if (!isset($this->map[$hash])) {
return false;
}
foreach ($this->map[$hash] as $item) {
if ($this->comparer->equals($item['key'], $key)) {
return true;
}
}
return false;
}
public function get($key) {
$hash = $this->comparer->getHashCode($key);
if (!isset($this->map[$hash])) {
return false;
}
foreach ($this->map[$hash] as $item) {
if ($this->comparer->equals($item['key'], $key)) {
return $item['value'];
}
}
return false;
}
public function del($key) {
$hash = $this->comparer->getHashCode($key);
if (!isset($this->map[$hash])) {
return false;
}
foreach ($this->map[$hash] as $index => $item) {
if ($this->comparer->equals($item['key'], $key)) {
unset($this->map[$hash][$index]);
if (count($this->map[$hash]) == 0)
unset($this->map[$hash]);
return true;
}
}
return false;
}
public function put($key, $value) {
$hash = $this->comparer->getHashCode($key);
if (!isset($this->map[$hash])) {
$this->map[$hash] = array();
}
$newItem = array('key' => $key, 'value' => $value);
foreach ($this->map[$hash] as $index => $item) {
if ($this->comparer->equals($item['key'], $key)) {
$this->map[$hash][$index] = $newItem;
return;
}
}
$this->map[$hash][] = $newItem;
}
}
For it to function you also need a hash-function for your key and a comparer for equality (if you only have a few items or for another reason don't need speed you can let the hash-function return 0; all items will be put in same bucket and you will get O(N) complexity)
Here is an example:
class IntArrayComparer extends IEqualityComparer {
public function equals($x, $y) {
if (count($x) !== count($y))
return false;
foreach ($x as $key => $value) {
if (!isset($y[$key]) || $y[$key] !== $value)
return false;
}
return true;
}
public function getHashCode($obj) {
$hash = 0;
foreach ($obj as $key => $value)
$hash ^= $key ^ $value;
return $hash;
}
}
$hashmap = new HashMap(new IntArrayComparer());
for ($i = 0; $i < 10; $i++) {
for ($j = 0; $j < 10; $j++) {
$hashmap->put(array($i, $j), $i * 10 + $j);
}
}
echo $hashmap->get(array(3, 7)) . "<br/>";
echo $hashmap->get(array(5, 1)) . "<br/>";
echo ($hashmap->has(array(8, 4))? 'true': 'false') . "<br/>";
echo ($hashmap->has(array(-1, 9))? 'true': 'false') . "<br/>";
echo ($hashmap->has(array(6))? 'true': 'false') . "<br/>";
echo ($hashmap->has(array(1, 2, 3))? 'true': 'false') . "<br/>";
$hashmap->del(array(8, 4));
echo ($hashmap->has(array(8, 4))? 'true': 'false') . "<br/>";
Which gives as output:
37
51
true
false
false
false
false
Upvotes: 10
Reputation: 301
$fruits = array (
"fruits" => array("a" => "Orange", "b" => "Banana", "c" => "Apple"),
"numbers" => array(1, 2, 3, 4, 5, 6),
"holes" => array("first", 5 => "second", "third")
);
echo $fruits["fruits"]["b"]
outputs 'Banana'
taken from https://www.php.net/manual/en/function.array.php
Upvotes: 20