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My function looks into an Vector of pointers by accessing an index decided by a hash function.

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  • Did you measure the time taken to initialize the pointers to null and determine that it is too long? Consider an array of unique_ptr which are set to an empty value automatically. Pass key by const reference.
    – Neil Kirk
    Mar 3, 2015 at 18:25
  • Wouldn't it be simpler to just use std::unordered_map ?
    – Borgleader
    Mar 3, 2015 at 18:25
  • I have not yet measured the time taken to initialize to 0, though I will consider it. Why pass the key by const reference?
    – who
    Mar 3, 2015 at 18:26
  • What doesn't work about what you have? As long as hashTable is initialized to nullptr for each index it should be fine.
    – lcs
    Mar 3, 2015 at 18:26
  • This is for homework, and am required to use a hashTable
    – who
    Mar 3, 2015 at 18:27

2 Answers 2

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If by array you mean a C array, then you'll have to initialize every index to some kind of "empty/default" value. The program has no way of distinguishing an uninitialized sequence of random bits from some value you inserted in there, and even attempting to read uninitialized data is undefined behavior.

No matter what, you'll need some sort of "bookkeeping" mechanism to tell which elements in the array are occupied. The easiest way is to zero-initialize the array, or initialize each value in the array to some default value. But note that if you zero-initialize the array, you'll have no way to distinguish between an "empty" slot, and a location where you inserted nullptr. You may want to consider having each element be a more complex aggregate object that contains information about whether the cell is occupied/empty/whatever. Generally, hash tables are composed of "bucket" elements which contain the actual key/value pair, as well as meta-data such as linked-lists to additional buckets for collision resolution, or if some kind of open addressing collision resolution scheme is used, some meta-data which marks the element as occupied/free/etc.

You may also want to consider using std::unordered_map, or some hash table implementation that grows as you insert more elements, if that becomes an option for you outside this particular homework assignment.

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You have 2 ways to initialize your hashTable array to NULL.

  1. During the declaration, like: "type"

    hashTable[size] = {NULL};
    

    However, this one doesn't work in Xcode. Fortunately, there is another way.

  2. In the constructor of your hashTable class, with a for loop:

    for(int  i = 0 ;  i  <  hashTable.size() ;  i++)
        hashTable[i] =  NULL;
    

A piece of advice: try to give different names for your hashTable class and your hashTable array.

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