Hello
if you search in an HashMap<String,String> for a specific value of a key-value-pair, you can write the following:
myHashMap.containsKey(myString);
But how can I manage it if the key is not a string? I have a class which looks like this:
public class Kategorie implements Comparable {
private String name;
public Kategorie() {
super();
}
public Kategorie(String name) {
setName(name);
}
public String getName() {
return name;
}
public void setName(String name) {
this.name = name;
}
@Override
public int compareTo(Object o) {
if (!(o instanceof Kategorie))
throw new ClassCastException();
Kategorie k = (Kategorie)o;
String name = k.getName();
return this.getName().compareTo(name);
}
}
In a map I saved keys and values of this type "Kategorie".
mapKategorieDEundEN.put(new Kategorie(strName_de), new Kategorie(strName_en));
Later in the code, I want to check if there is a key with a specific string.
if (mapKategorieDEundEN.containsKey(searchString)) {
...doesn't work, because the key is not a string but a "Kategorie", that's clear.
Then I tried something like this:
if (mapKategorieDEundEN.containsKey(new Kategorie(searchString))) {
...doesn't work too. I assume that it doesn't find anything because the object is not the "original" object but a new one.
In this case, can I use containsKey at all or do I have to use a loop over the HashMap?