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So lets say I have: map<pair<int, MyEnum>, string> myMap;

and I add a key value: myMap[make_pair(1, MyEnum::first)] = "something";

how can I retrieve the value "something"

so if the map was map<int, string> and I had myMap[1] = "something";

i would say string s = myMap[1]

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  • Why is the key a pair ? Cannot you use the pair on the other side ? Keep key as 1 and use MyEnum::first and "something" as the data.
    – DumbCoder
    Mar 8, 2012 at 15:34
  • You need the key to find something by key. If you don't want to have to supply the value of the enum to look something up, it shouldn't be part of the key. See my comment to Nawaz's answer. It looks like you really want map< int, pair< MyEnum, string > >. Mar 8, 2012 at 15:44

2 Answers 2

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In the same way,

std::cout << myMap[make_pair(1, MyEnum::first)] << std::endl;

Output:

something

Hope that helps.

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  • 2
    Exactly. If the OP wants to look up by int, he should have made int the key and made the value pair<MyEnum, string>. The key is basically "whatever you want to give to find a value". The value is "whatever you want to find by key". If you want to find the enum, rather than finding by the enum, it should be part of the value. Mar 8, 2012 at 15:43
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string s = myMap[make_pair(1, MyEnum::first)];

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