-
Notifications
You must be signed in to change notification settings - Fork 839
/
map-set-get.js
51 lines (35 loc) · 1.58 KB
/
map-set-get.js
1
2
3
4
5
6
7
8
9
10
11
12
13
14
15
16
17
18
19
20
21
22
23
24
25
26
27
28
29
30
31
32
33
34
35
36
37
38
39
40
41
42
43
44
45
46
47
48
49
50
51
/*
Objects for storing keyed collections.
Arrays for storing ordered collections.
But that’s not enough for real life. That’s why Map and Set also exist.
Map
Map is a collection of keyed data items, just like an Object. But the main difference is that Map allows keys of any type.
The main methods are:
new Map() – creates the map.
map.set(key, value) – stores the value by the key.
map.get(key) – returns the value by the key, undefined if key doesn’t exist in map.
map.has(key) – returns true if the key exists, false otherwise.
map.delete(key) – removes the value by the key.
map.clear() – clears the map
map.size – returns the current element count. */
// EXAMPLE-1
let map = new Map(),
val2 = 'val2',
val3 = {
key: 'value'
};
console.log(map) // => Map {}
map.set(0, 'val-1')
console.log(map) // => Map { 0 => 'val-1' }
// EXAMPLE-2 Map can also use objects as keys
let john = { name: "John" };
// for every user, let's store his visits count
let visitsCountMap = new Map();
// john is the key for the map
visitsCountMap.set(john, 123);
// console.log(visitsCountMap.get(john) ); // 123
console.log(visitsCountMap) // => Map { { name: 'John' } => 123 }
/* Using objects as keys is one of most notable and important Map features. For string keys, Object can be fine, but it would be difficult to replace the Map with a regular Object in the example above. In the old times, before Map existed, people added unique identifiers to objects for that like below */
let john_old = { name: 'john-old', id : 1}
let visitsCounts = {}
visitsCounts[john.id] = 123;