Is it possible to set more than two pair value?
For example:
Map<String,String,String,String>
number,name,address,phone - All come together for display the values. Each value associated with others.
|
|
|
You're in object denial. You should use an object that holds the number, name, address, phone (maybe you could call it |
|||||||||||||||||
|
|
No. a
|
|||||||||
|
|
The 'correct' solution is to use an object that holds the values in named fields, but in the spirit of answering the question asked, a simple (if unclean) solution would be to use:
Note google-collections has a series of classes that implement this structure right out of the box called ListMultimap and it's implementation ArrayListMultimap |
|||||||||||||
|
|
Nope, A Map can have only one key and mapped to one value. This is the Javadoc for Map:
What you can do is to create an entity called
then add it to a map like so....
|
|||
|
|
|
Hmmm, You could create a class for Person with number, name, address and phoneno, then you create a Map |
|||
|
|
|
Just in case you want to maintain a map of: "number, name" --> "address, phone" and you do not wish to create a class to encapsulate these attributes. You may have a look in the handy MultiKey in Apache Commons Collections: http://commons.apache.org/collections/apidocs/org/apache/commons/collections/keyvalue/MultiKey.html |
|||
|
|
|
As others have said, a map is a mapping between a key and a value. That is why the javadoc for map says (since generics in v5):
... where K is the type of the key, and V is the type of the value. Just <K, V>. You must define exactly two types. It is worth mentioning that in mathematics 'map' is a term meaning to convert a value of one type into a value of another type. The Java Map is a reflection of this, (as is the method map available on collections in Scala). |
|||||
|
|
Your question suggests you want key on each of the 4 fields and all others become values. While in general, it is one key and multiple values packed on a object. Please confirm what is required. |
|||
|
|