473,409 Members | 1,954 Online
Bytes | Software Development & Data Engineering Community
Post Job

Home Posts Topics Members FAQ

Join Bytes to post your question to a community of 473,409 software developers and data experts.

STL Map

Hi,

When find(x) is called on an STL map, is the check for equality for the
key performed as:

for all y in the map, find the case where the following is true:
key_compare(x, y)==false && key_compare(y, x)==false
Thanks,
Mike

Jul 22 '05 #1
8 1206
On Fri, 09 Apr 2004 19:15:26 GMT, Michael McKnerney
<mi***************@baesystems.com> wrote:
Hi,

When find(x) is called on an STL map, is the check for equality for the
key performed as:

for all y in the map, find the case where the following is true:
key_compare(x, y)==false && key_compare(y, x)==false
Yes, but this is referred to as "equivalence" rather than "equality" (just
so the concepts can be kept distinct.) Thus it is possible for keys to be
equivalent, based on comparing only some subset of their attributes, when
they'd (perhaps) not compare equal using the == (or !=) operators.

I think your wording "for all y in the map" holds here, but it might not
hold for, say, a multimap (I know, that isn't a "map") , where it would
stop searching when it finds the /first/ equivalent key.
-leor

Thanks,
Mike


--
Leor Zolman --- BD Software --- www.bdsoft.com
On-Site Training in C/C++, Java, Perl and Unix
C++ users: Download BD Software's free STL Error Message Decryptor at:
www.bdsoft.com/tools/stlfilt.html
Jul 22 '05 #2
On Fri, 09 Apr 2004 19:15:26 GMT, Michael McKnerney
<mi***************@baesystems.com> wrote:
Hi,

When find(x) is called on an STL map, is the check for equality for the
key performed as:

for all y in the map, find the case where the following is true:
key_compare(x, y)==false && key_compare(y, x)==false
Yes, but this is referred to as "equivalence" rather than "equality" (just
so the concepts can be kept distinct.) Thus it is possible for keys to be
equivalent, based on comparing only some subset of their attributes, when
they'd (perhaps) not compare equal using the == (or !=) operators.

I think your wording "for all y in the map" holds here, but it might not
hold for, say, a multimap (I know, that isn't a "map") , where it would
stop searching when it finds the /first/ equivalent key.
-leor

Thanks,
Mike


--
Leor Zolman --- BD Software --- www.bdsoft.com
On-Site Training in C/C++, Java, Perl and Unix
C++ users: Download BD Software's free STL Error Message Decryptor at:
www.bdsoft.com/tools/stlfilt.html
Jul 22 '05 #3
"Michael McKnerney" <mi***************@baesystems.com> wrote
When find(x) is called on an STL map, is the check for equality for
the key performed as:

for all y in the map, find the case where the following is true:
key_compare(x, y)==false && key_compare(y, x)==false


The standard guarantees that the order of map's 'find' is log(N), so it will
not compare the search key to every key already in the map but only to those
keys along the search path. In other words, given the red-black tree
structure used by almost all implementations, you should expect at most
2*(log2(length)+1) key comparisons to occur.

Claudio Puviani
Jul 22 '05 #4
"Michael McKnerney" <mi***************@baesystems.com> wrote
When find(x) is called on an STL map, is the check for equality for
the key performed as:

for all y in the map, find the case where the following is true:
key_compare(x, y)==false && key_compare(y, x)==false


The standard guarantees that the order of map's 'find' is log(N), so it will
not compare the search key to every key already in the map but only to those
keys along the search path. In other words, given the red-black tree
structure used by almost all implementations, you should expect at most
2*(log2(length)+1) key comparisons to occur.

Claudio Puviani
Jul 22 '05 #5
On Fri, 09 Apr 2004 19:50:20 GMT, "Claudio Puviani" <pu*****@hotmail.com>
wrote:
"Michael McKnerney" <mi***************@baesystems.com> wrote
When find(x) is called on an STL map, is the check for equality for
the key performed as:

for all y in the map, find the case where the following is true:
key_compare(x, y)==false && key_compare(y, x)==false
The standard guarantees that the order of map's 'find' is log(N), so it will
not compare the search key to every key already in the map but only to those
keys along the search path. In other words, given the red-black tree
structure used by almost all implementations, you should expect at most
2*(log2(length)+1) key comparisons to occur.


At first I thought the OP meant "every element will be examined", but upon
further reflection on his wording, I decided his "all y" was more
math-speak than a reflection of his expectations re. performance (I may, of
course, be wrong about that.)

Anyway, if I'm right, then if he really wanted a solution "for all y" in
the case of multimap, he'd be looking at something like equal_range() for
his answer. Make sense?
-leor

Claudio Puviani


--
Leor Zolman --- BD Software --- www.bdsoft.com
On-Site Training in C/C++, Java, Perl and Unix
C++ users: Download BD Software's free STL Error Message Decryptor at:
www.bdsoft.com/tools/stlfilt.html
Jul 22 '05 #6
On Fri, 09 Apr 2004 19:50:20 GMT, "Claudio Puviani" <pu*****@hotmail.com>
wrote:
"Michael McKnerney" <mi***************@baesystems.com> wrote
When find(x) is called on an STL map, is the check for equality for
the key performed as:

for all y in the map, find the case where the following is true:
key_compare(x, y)==false && key_compare(y, x)==false
The standard guarantees that the order of map's 'find' is log(N), so it will
not compare the search key to every key already in the map but only to those
keys along the search path. In other words, given the red-black tree
structure used by almost all implementations, you should expect at most
2*(log2(length)+1) key comparisons to occur.


At first I thought the OP meant "every element will be examined", but upon
further reflection on his wording, I decided his "all y" was more
math-speak than a reflection of his expectations re. performance (I may, of
course, be wrong about that.)

Anyway, if I'm right, then if he really wanted a solution "for all y" in
the case of multimap, he'd be looking at something like equal_range() for
his answer. Make sense?
-leor

Claudio Puviani


--
Leor Zolman --- BD Software --- www.bdsoft.com
On-Site Training in C/C++, Java, Perl and Unix
C++ users: Download BD Software's free STL Error Message Decryptor at:
www.bdsoft.com/tools/stlfilt.html
Jul 22 '05 #7
"Leor Zolman" <le**@bdsoft.com> wrote
"Claudio Puviani" <pu*****@hotmail.com> wrote:
"Michael McKnerney" <mi***************@baesystems.com> wrote
When find(x) is called on an STL map, is the
check for equality for the key performed as:

for all y in the map, find the case where the
following is true:
key_compare(x, y)==false && key_compare(y, x)==false
The standard guarantees that the order of map's 'find'
is log(N), so it will not compare the search key to
every key already in the map but only to those keys
along the search path. In other words, given the red-
black tree structure used by almost all implementations,
you should expect at most 2*(log2(length)+1) key

comparisons to occur.

At first I thought the OP meant "every element will be
examined", but upon further reflection on his wording,
I decided his "all y" was more math-speak than a reflection
of his expectations re. performance (I may, of course,
be wrong about that.)


You could easily be right about that.
Anyway, if I'm right, then if he really wanted a solution
"for all y" in the case of multimap, he'd be looking at
something like equal_range() for his answer. Make sense?


Totally. Or possibly lower_bound() followed by manually testing the key
values while iterating, depending on the specific needs.

Claudio Puviani
Jul 22 '05 #8
"Leor Zolman" <le**@bdsoft.com> wrote
"Claudio Puviani" <pu*****@hotmail.com> wrote:
"Michael McKnerney" <mi***************@baesystems.com> wrote
When find(x) is called on an STL map, is the
check for equality for the key performed as:

for all y in the map, find the case where the
following is true:
key_compare(x, y)==false && key_compare(y, x)==false
The standard guarantees that the order of map's 'find'
is log(N), so it will not compare the search key to
every key already in the map but only to those keys
along the search path. In other words, given the red-
black tree structure used by almost all implementations,
you should expect at most 2*(log2(length)+1) key

comparisons to occur.

At first I thought the OP meant "every element will be
examined", but upon further reflection on his wording,
I decided his "all y" was more math-speak than a reflection
of his expectations re. performance (I may, of course,
be wrong about that.)


You could easily be right about that.
Anyway, if I'm right, then if he really wanted a solution
"for all y" in the case of multimap, he'd be looking at
something like equal_range() for his answer. Make sense?


Totally. Or possibly lower_bound() followed by manually testing the key
values while iterating, depending on the specific needs.

Claudio Puviani
Jul 22 '05 #9

This thread has been closed and replies have been disabled. Please start a new discussion.

Similar topics

3
by: William C. White | last post by:
Does anyone know of a way to use PHP /w Authorize.net AIM without using cURL? Our website is hosted on a shared drive and the webhost company doesn't installed additional software (such as cURL)...
2
by: Albert Ahtenberg | last post by:
Hello, I don't know if it is only me but I was sure that header("Location:url") redirects the browser instantly to URL, or at least stops the execution of the code. But appearantely it continues...
3
by: James | last post by:
Hi, I have a form with 2 fields. 'A' 'B' The user completes one of the fields and the form is submitted. On the results page I want to run a query, but this will change subject to which...
0
by: Ollivier Robert | last post by:
Hello, I'm trying to link PHP with Oracle 9.2.0/OCI8 with gcc 3.2.3 on a Solaris9 system. The link succeeds but everytime I try to run php, I get a SEGV from inside the libcnltsh.so library. ...
1
by: Richard Galli | last post by:
I want viewers to compare state laws on a single subject. Imagine a three-column table with a drop-down box on the top. A viewer selects a state from the list, and that state's text fills the...
4
by: Albert Ahtenberg | last post by:
Hello, I have two questions. 1. When the user presses the back button and returns to a form he filled the form is reseted. How do I leave there the values he inserted? 2. When the...
1
by: inderjit S Gabrie | last post by:
Hi all Here is the scenerio ...is it possibly to do this... i am getting valid course dates output on to a web which i have designed ....all is okay so far , look at the following web url ...
2
by: Jack | last post by:
Hi All, What is the PHP equivilent of Oracle bind variables in a SQL statement, e.g. select x from y where z=:parameter Which in asp/jsp would be followed by some statements to bind a value...
3
by: Sandwick | last post by:
I am trying to change the size of a drawing so they are all 3x3. the script below is what i was trying to use to cut it in half ... I get errors. I can display the normal picture but not the...
0
by: emmanuelkatto | last post by:
Hi All, I am Emmanuel katto from Uganda. I want to ask what challenges you've faced while migrating a website to cloud. Please let me know. Thanks! Emmanuel
1
by: nemocccc | last post by:
hello, everyone, I want to develop a software for my android phone for daily needs, any suggestions?
1
by: Sonnysonu | last post by:
This is the data of csv file 1 2 3 1 2 3 1 2 3 1 2 3 2 3 2 3 3 the lengths should be different i have to store the data by column-wise with in the specific length. suppose the i have to...
0
Oralloy
by: Oralloy | last post by:
Hello folks, I am unable to find appropriate documentation on the type promotion of bit-fields when using the generalised comparison operator "<=>". The problem is that using the GNU compilers,...
0
by: Hystou | last post by:
Overview: Windows 11 and 10 have less user interface control over operating system update behaviour than previous versions of Windows. In Windows 11 and 10, there is no way to turn off the Windows...
0
tracyyun
by: tracyyun | last post by:
Dear forum friends, With the development of smart home technology, a variety of wireless communication protocols have appeared on the market, such as Zigbee, Z-Wave, Wi-Fi, Bluetooth, etc. Each...
0
agi2029
by: agi2029 | last post by:
Let's talk about the concept of autonomous AI software engineers and no-code agents. These AIs are designed to manage the entire lifecycle of a software development project—planning, coding, testing,...
0
isladogs
by: isladogs | last post by:
The next Access Europe User Group meeting will be on Wednesday 1 May 2024 starting at 18:00 UK time (6PM UTC+1) and finishing by 19:30 (7.30PM). In this session, we are pleased to welcome a new...
0
by: conductexam | last post by:
I have .net C# application in which I am extracting data from word file and save it in database particularly. To store word all data as it is I am converting the whole word file firstly in HTML and...

By using Bytes.com and it's services, you agree to our Privacy Policy and Terms of Use.

To disable or enable advertisements and analytics tracking please visit the manage ads & tracking page.