Is it guaranteed that when a hash_map/unordered_map is loaded with the same items, they will have the same order when iterated? Basically I have a hashmap which I load from a file, and from which I periodically feed a limited number of items to a routine, after which I free the hashmap. After the items are consumed, I re-load the same file to the hashmap and want to get the next batch of items after the point where I stopped the previous time. The point at which I stop would be identified by the key.
2 Answers
Technically no, they are not guaranteed to be in any particular order.
In practice however, given that you use deterministic hash function, what you want to do should be fine.
consider
std::string name;
std::string value;
std::unordered_map <std::string, std::string> map1;
std::unordered_map <std::string, std::string> map2;
while (read_pair (name, value))
{
map1[name] = value;
map2[name] = value;
}
you can reasonably expect that name-value pairs in map1
and map2
go in the same order.
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Yes, that is my point - I am not interested in the order itself, but if it will be the same the next time I load the hashmap. Thanks for the answer Nov 29, 2012 at 9:32
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4Apart from it being a bad idea in general to rely on behaviour that is not guaranteed, I think it's important to note that this relies on the fact that the insertion order is the same in both maps, which will not necessarily be preserved when reloading the files (since the iteration order will likely not match the original insertion order). Nov 29, 2012 at 9:36
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@John Bartholomew: I didn't understand the point about the insertion order - I insert the items as I parse the file, so is always the same. Nov 29, 2012 at 9:58
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@AlexanderVassilev: John is probably thinking of the very first time you insert the items, before the map is ever saved to disk. The order on disk won't match the order they were inserted that first time, even if everything is deterministic. I would say the full description of your question makes clear you don't care about that very first time, but the "headline question" doesn't exclude it, and neither does your first sentence: "when a hash_map/unordered_map is loaded with the same items" rather than "the same items in the same order". Nov 29, 2012 at 10:06
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Well, I don't save the map on disk. I only load it, the file is not generated from the map. Nov 29, 2012 at 10:32
No, you cannot safely do this. Firstly, it's not guaranteed by the standard, but even if you ignore the standard and look at real implementations, it is a bad idea.
Most hash table structures are not history independent. That is: the state of the hash table depends not only on what items it contains, but also what order they were inserted.
Here is a concrete example:
#include <unordered_map>
#include <string>
#include <iostream>
static const char* const NAMES[] = {
"joe",
"bob",
"alexander",
"warren",
"paul",
"michael",
"george",
"david",
"peter"
};
static const int NAME_COUNT = sizeof(NAMES)/sizeof(NAMES[0]);
static void print_umap(const std::unordered_map<std::string, int>& m) {
for (const auto& item : m) {
std::cout << " " << item.first << "\n";
}
}
int main(void) {
std::unordered_map<std::string, int> a;
std::unordered_map<std::string, int> b;
std::unordered_map<std::string, int> c;
for (int i = 0; i < NAME_COUNT; ++i) {
a[NAMES[i]] = 0;
b[NAMES[NAME_COUNT - 1 - i]] = 0;
}
for (const auto& item : a) {
c[item.first] = 0;
}
std::cout << "a:\n";
print_umap(a);
std::cout << "\n\nb:\n";
print_umap(b);
std::cout << "\n\nc:\n";
print_umap(c);
return 0;
}
When I build this using clang and the libc++ implementation of the C++ standard library, I get the following output:
a:
peter
george
michael
david
paul
bob
warren
alexander
joe
b:
joe
alexander
bob
warren
david
paul
michael
george
peter
c:
joe
alexander
warren
bob
paul
david
michael
george
peter
Note that the order is different in every case. This is not at all unusual for hash tables.
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I agree with this, but in my case the insertion order is guaranteed to be the same every time. Nov 29, 2012 at 10:35
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+1 @john. In my case the unordered map is populated during static initialization - and the order is not guaranteed.– OpherDec 12, 2022 at 18:33