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What is the best way to determine if a STL map contains a value for a given key?

#include <map>

using namespace std;

struct Bar
{
    int i;
};

int main()
{
    map<int, Bar> m;
    Bar b = {0};
    Bar b1 = {1};

    m[0] = b;
    m[1] = b1;

    //Bar b2 = m[2];
    map<int, Bar>::iterator iter = m.find(2);
    Bar b3 = iter->second;

}

Examining this in a debugger, it looks like iter is just garbage data.

If I uncomment out this line:

Bar b2 = m[2]

The debugger shows that b2 is {i = 0}. (I'm guessing it means that using an undefined index will return a struct with all empty/uninitialized values?)

Neither of these methods is so great. What I'd really like is an interface like this:

bool getValue(int key, Bar& out)
{
    if (map contains value for key)
    {
        out = map[key];
        return true;
    }
    return false;
}

Does something along these lines exist?

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6 Answers

up vote 47 down vote accepted

Does something along these lines exist?

No. With the stl map class, you use ::find() to search the map, and compare the returned iterator to std::map::end()

so

map<int,Bar>::iterator it = m.find('2');
Bar b3;
if(it != m.end())
{
   //element found;
   b3 = it->second;
}

Obviously you can write your own getValue() routine if you want (also in C++, there is no reason to use out), but I would suspect that once you get the hang of using std::map::find() you won't want to waste your time.

Also your code is slightly wrong:

m.find('2'); will search the map for a keyvalue that is '2'. IIRC the C++ compiler will implicitly convert '2' to an int, which results in the numeric value for the ASCII code for '2' which is not what you want.

Since your keytype in this example is int you want to search like this: m.find(2);

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1  
Yeah, good catch with the '2' v. 2 error. – Rosarch Jun 28 '10 at 22:21
This answers sounds much better: stackoverflow.com/a/11765524/496223 – yes123 May 23 at 8:22
How so? find indicates intent far better than count does. More over, count doesn't return the item. If you read the OP's question, he's wants to check for the existance, and return the element. find does that. count does not. – Alan May 23 at 16:49

It already exists with find only not in that exact syntax.

if (m.find(2) == m.end() )
{
    // key 2 doesn't exist
}

If you want to access the value if it exists, you can do:

map<int, Bar>::iterator iter = m.find(2);
if (iter != m.end() )
{
    // key 2 exists, do something with iter->second (the value)
}

With C++0x and auto, the syntax is simpler:

auto iter = m.find(2);
if (iter != m.end() )
{
    // key 2 exists, do something with iter->second (the value)
}

I recommend you get used to it rather than trying to come up with a new mechanism to simplify it. You might be able to cut down a little bit of code, but consider the cost of doing that. Now you've introduced a new function that people familiar with C++ won't be able to recognize.

If you want to implement this anyway in spite of these warnings, then:

template <class Key, class Value, class Comparator, class Alloc>
bool getValue(const std::map<Key, Value, Comparator, Alloc>& my_map, int key, Value& out)
{
    typename std::map<Key, Value, Comparator, Alloc>::const_iterator it = my_map.find(key);
    if (it != my_map.end() )
    {
        out = it->second;
        return true;
    }
    return false;
}
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Use count, not find.

if (m.count(key))
    // key exists
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Surprised it's not the accepted answer.. – vines Oct 5 '12 at 0:44
Won't this check all the keys even if it has found one already? That can get expensive fast... – mmdanziger Oct 24 '12 at 20:42
4  
It will only count more than one key if used on a multimap. – Andrew Prock Mar 13 at 23:38
Fantastic. It never occurred to me I could do this. Thanks. – David Given Jun 13 at 16:03

amap.find returns amap::end when it does not find what you're looking for -- you're supposed to check for that.

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Check the return value of find against end.

map<int, Bar>::iterator iter = m.find('2');
if ( map.end() != iter ) { 
  // contains
  ...
}
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You can create your getValue function with the following code:

bool getValue(const std::map<int, Bar>& input, int key, Bar& out)
{
   std::map<int, Bar>::iterator foundIter = input.find(key);
   if (foundIter != input.end())
   {
      out = *foundIter;
      return true;
   }
   return false;
}
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