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I want to do the following:
Define a map between a string and any kind of object (may be a list, integer - anything).
The keys to the map can be as follow (the values are, again, not important):
"AAA/123" ==> 1
"AAA/" ==> 2
"BBB/
" ==> 3
"CCC/*" ==> 4
"CCC/123" ==> 5
Now, the trick is I want to find the right values given the following strings:
"AAA/123" should give 1.
"AAA/111" should give 2.
"CCC/111" should give 4.
"CCC/123" should give 5.
"BBB/AAA/123" should give 3.

Any idea how I do that with C++ and possibly STL/boost ?

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i deleted my answer because i didn't think enough :) i think a trie would be ideal for this usecase. simply move along the paths of the trie until no more matching items are found. have a look here: en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Trie. – Johannes Schaub - litb Feb 17 at 15:41

3 Answers

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Here's a variant of litb answer (which was somehow deleted from the answers list) which might work given the '*' is removed:

template<typename Map> typename Map::const_iterator
find_prefix(Map const& map, typename Map::key_type const& key)
{
    typename Map::const_iterator it = map.upper_bound(key);
    while (it != map.begin())
    {
        --it;
        if(key.substr(0, it->first.size()) == it->first)
            return it;
    }

    return map.end(); // map contains no prefix
}

I forgot to add the code that uses it:

std::map<std::string, int> smap;
smap["AAA/"] = 1;
smap["BBB/"] = 2;
smap["AAA/AA"] = 3;

find_prefix(smap, "AAA/AB")->second; // ==> 1
find_prefix(smap, "AAA/AA")->second; // ==> 3
find_prefix(smap, "BBB/AB")->second; // ==> 2
find_prefix(smap, "CCC/AB"); // ==> smap.end()

any comment (and thanks to litb) ?

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yeah this is a good workaround i think. if you have many elements in your map, you might also successively call find_prefix, with the search string being always one less in size. that will then avoid a linear search depending on the map size, but now depending on the search string's size. – Johannes Schaub - litb Feb 17 at 15:49
but i dunno whether that would really be faster. im a little poor with such analysis :) maybe some tests are in order :) – Johannes Schaub - litb Feb 17 at 15:51
As my map should be too large (up to several dozens of entries) and the key is also limited by the same number more or less (how long a string can be ?) - I guess it doesn't really matter what way is the fastest. – Guy Feb 17 at 16:03
great then i think your way would do fine. wouldn't bother to get a trie then, actually if the performance would not be affected that much. – Johannes Schaub - litb Feb 17 at 16:14
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From your requirement it seems that you don't really want map data structure but may be set or something very simple.

I think structure like this std::map might help you. Boost::any will be able to store anything, but caveat is that you need to know that value type is to read it back.

Key is string and hence it can be regex expression too. With this structure you will need two pass algorithm as:

std::map<std::string, boost::any> _map;
if (_map.find(key) != _map.end)
{
   // exact match
}
else
{
   // Have to do sequential regex (use boost::regex) matching
}

Since regex evaluation at runtime might be costly, you may use std::vector>, such that for regex patterns you store compiled regex into one of the fields.

It might be useful to give more background what you want to accomplish, as it may help to decide on right data structure and search algorithm.

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vote up 0 vote down

What about using two maps ?

std::map<std::string, std::map<int, object> >

If you want to lookup aaa/* you do

a.find("aaa") => you get an iterator to the map with all "aaa" prefix

If you want to lookup aaa/123 you do

a.find("aaa")->find(123)

(of course you MUST validate that you don't get end, this is just for the example)

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What if the prefix is not only "aaa", but can also be "aaa/bbb" ? – Guy Feb 17 at 15:46
If you want something efficient, you need to come up with some clear rules. What is your final goal? – Edouard A. Feb 17 at 15:59

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