7

I would like to see a simple example of how to override stdext::hash_compare properly, in order to define a new hash function and comparison operator for my own user-defined type. I'm using Visual C++ (2008).

3 Answers 3

8

This is how you can do it

class MyClass_Hasher {
     const size_t bucket_size = 10; // mean bucket size that the container should try not to exceed
     const size_t min_buckets = (1 << 10); // minimum number of buckets, power of 2, >0
     MyClass_Hasher() {
          // should be default-constructible
     }
     size_t operator()(const MyClass &key) {
             size_t hash_value;
             // do fancy stuff here with hash_value
             // to create the hash value. There's no specific
             // requirement on the value.
             return hash_value;
     }

     bool operator()(const MyClass &left, const MyClass &right) {
            // this should implement a total ordering on MyClass, that is
            // it should return true if "left" precedes "right" in the ordering
     }
 };

Then, you can just use

stdext::hash_map my_map<MyClass, MyValue, MyClass_Hasher>
1
  • I think the operator()s should be const functions or MSVC2005 will generate c3849 error
    – avee
    Apr 21, 2011 at 8:26
1

Here you go, example from MSDN

1
  • 2
    That example doesn't overload the hash function.
    – batty
    May 16, 2009 at 21:36
0

I prefer using a non-member function.

The method expained in the Boost documentation article Extending boost::hash for a custom data type seems to work.

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