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I don't understand this with Scala hasmaps: How do I create a value or update one if it does not exist?

I am tryng to count the number of characters in a list of Strings.

I've tried this code but it doesn't work :

 def times(chars: List[Char]): List[(Char, Int)] = {
     val map = new HashMap[Char, Int]()
     chars.foreach(
        (c : Char) => {
           map.update(c, map.get(c) + 1)
        })
 } 

I understand the returning type isn't correct. But is my foreach loop wrong? Is there a prettier way to write it?

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  • 1
    I would suggest anonymizing code snippets so that they are not directly taken from the Coursera course assignments, especially in light of the recent "academic fraud" alerts.
    – ach
    Oct 15, 2012 at 17:32

2 Answers 2

3

I think this will answer your question:

scala> "abaccdba".groupBy(identity).mapValues(_.length)
res3: scala.collection.immutable.Map[Char,Int] = Map(b -> 2, d -> 1, a -> 3, c -> 2)

Oh, and btw HashMap has a method getOrElseUpdate as to your original question

3
  • Thank you very much. I think that updating or creating a map value using the previous value (if there is) can be interesting. How Is it possible?
    – bruce
    Oct 12, 2012 at 22:17
  • See the API Oct 12, 2012 at 22:29
  • Well beleving the API GetOrElseUpdate update only if there is no value. Whereas I'd like to update always. There is an update method but it doesn't use the previous value.
    – bruce
    Oct 12, 2012 at 22:43
1

If someone wonder how to use GetOrElseUpdate and find this post here is the exemple I found :

val map = Map('a' -> 1, 'b' -> 2)         //> map  :  
scala.collection.immutable.Map[Char,Int] = Map(a -> 1, b -> 2)
val newval = map.getOrElse('b', 0) + 1      //> newval  : Int = 3
val updated = map + ('b' -> (newval))        //> updated  : 
scala.collection.immutable.Map[Char,Int] = Map(a -> 1, b -> 3)
1
  • You can also say "Map(...) withDefaultValue 0" instead of using getOrElse.
    – ach
    Oct 15, 2012 at 17:27

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