There are std::map::insert
and std::unordered_map::insert
overloads that take an std::initializer_list
and offer a similar functionality. But these only to up-date non-existing elements.
To replicate the dict.update
behaviour, you could roll out your own helper function:
template <typename K, typename V>
void update_map(std::map<K,V>& m,
std::initializer_list<typename std::map<K,V>::value_type> l)
{
for (const auto& p : l)
m[p.first] = p.second;
}
std::map<int, int> m { {1, 10}, {2, 20} };
update_map(m, {{1, 150}, {5, 500}});
for (const auto& p : m)
{
std::cout << "{" << p.first << ", " << p.second << "}\n";
}
Output:
{1, 150}
{2, 20}
{5, 500}