Reputation: 64227
Inside a function of mine I construct a result set by filling a new mutable HashMap with data (if there is a better way - I'd appreciate comments). Then I'd like to return the result set as an immutable HashMap. How to derive an immutable from a mutable?
Upvotes: 13
Views: 15034
Reputation: 1050
If you have a map : logMap: Map[String, String]
just need to do : logMap.toMap()
Upvotes: 2
Reputation: 7857
Discussion about returning immutable.Map
vs. immutable.HashMap
notwithstanding, what about simply using the toMap
method:
scala> val m = collection.mutable.HashMap(1 -> 2, 3 -> 4)
m: scala.collection.mutable.HashMap[Int,Int] = Map(3 -> 4, 1 -> 2)
scala> m.toMap
res22: scala.collection.immutable.Map[Int,Int] = Map(3 -> 4, 1 -> 2)
As of 2.9, this uses the method toMap
in TraversableOnce
, which is implemented as follows:
def toMap[T, U](implicit ev: A <:< (T, U)): immutable.Map[T, U] = {
val b = immutable.Map.newBuilder[T, U]
for (x <- self)
b += x
b.result
}
Upvotes: 13
Reputation: 52701
scala> val m = collection.mutable.HashMap(1->2,3->4)
m: scala.collection.mutable.HashMap[Int,Int] = Map(3 -> 4, 1 -> 2)
scala> collection.immutable.HashMap() ++ m
res1: scala.collection.immutable.Map[Int,Int] = Map(1 -> 2, 3 -> 4)
or
scala> collection.immutable.HashMap(m.toSeq:_*)
res2: scala.collection.immutable.HashMap[Int,Int] = Map(1 -> 2, 3 -> 4)
Upvotes: 8