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Just a quick syntax question. I'm writing a map class (for school).

If I define the following operator overload:

template<typename Key, typename Val> class Map {...
Val* operator[](Key k);

What happens when a user writes:

Map<int,int> myMap;
map[10] = 3;

Doing something like that will only overwrite a temporary copy of the [null] pointer at Key k. Is it even possible to do:

map[10] = 3;
printf("%i\n", map[10]);

with the same operator overload?

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1 Answer

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The way it works with std::map is that, if the key doesn't exist, the map class will insert a default value and then return an lvalue (an assignable reference to the value associated with the key), so it can be assigned a new value.

So, in the following code sample, assuming map is empty, this will insert 10 into the map and associate it with a value of 3.

map[10] = 3;

With your custom map class, operator[] should first check if the Key k exists, and if not, insert a new key/value pair (using the default constructor of typename Val) into the map. You can then return a reference to the Value associated with the new key, so the user can assign a value to it. Note that this means that Val must be Assignable and have a default constructor.

This allows operator[] to be used both for insertion and lookup. You should also overload a const version of operator[], which of course only supports lookup.

Edit: I now noticed in your code that you are returning a pointer. If you want to use the insert/lookup paradigm for operator[] used by std::map, it makes more sense to return a reference. Returning a pointer gives you the advantage that you can examine the return value of operator[] for NULL to check if the key doesn't exist, but again, if you want operator[] to provide both lookup and insert functionality, a reference would be the way to go here.

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so I should define my overload as Val& operator[] (Key k); and ofc ensure that I initialize appropriately, even if there isn't anything there. – Lanissum Nov 2 at 0:04
That is correct. – Charles Salvia Nov 2 at 0:06
Thanks a bunch; kind of a shame that I have to make objects, even when it's not 'needed'. – Lanissum Nov 2 at 0:09
Well, you don't have to do it that way. The [] operator is provided strictly for the class user's convenience. The user can always use normal find/insert functions. – Charles Salvia Nov 2 at 0:16
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Also, it's preferable to define your overload as: Val& operator[] (const Key& k); so you can pass k by reference, rather by value. – Charles Salvia Nov 2 at 0:24

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