193

I have a very simple task I am trying to do in Groovy but cannot seem to get it to work. I am just trying to loop through a map object in groovy and print out the key and value but this code does not work.

// A simple map
def map = [
        iPhone : 'iWebOS',
        Android: '2.3.3',
        Nokia  : 'Symbian',
        Windows: 'WM8'
]

// Print the values
for (s in map) {
    println s + ": " + map[s]
}

I am trying to get the output to look like this:

iPhone: iWebOS
Android: 2.3.3
Nokia: Symbian
Windows: WM8

Could someone please elaborate on how to do this??

2
  • As you have seen in the answers, the problem is that iterating over a map gives you a collection of "Entries", you were assuming it would give you the keys and you would look up the values. If you wanted to do it that way, iterate over map.keySet() and the rest will work as you expected.
    – Bill K
    Jun 13, 2017 at 15:51
  • It should work if you use s.key & s.value in your code inside for loop. Nov 14, 2017 at 20:25

4 Answers 4

369

Quite simple with a closure:

def map = [
           'iPhone':'iWebOS',
           'Android':'2.3.3',
           'Nokia':'Symbian',
           'Windows':'WM8'
           ]

map.each{ k, v -> println "${k}:${v}" }
3
  • 2
    Out of curiosity, where is this documented in the Groovy language docs (I don't think it is!)? I guess I'm wondering, from a Groovy newbies' perspective, How did you know this?
    – smeeb
    Oct 24, 2015 at 10:40
  • 11
    @smeeb: everything is well documented, take a look here: groovy-lang.org/groovy-dev-kit.html#_iterating_on_maps
    – Jack
    Oct 24, 2015 at 15:26
  • appreciating that this is a historic post: a for loop and an each closure are not one and the same and there may be times where the latter is preferred over the former. 11 hours ago
115

Alternatively you could use a for loop as shown in the Groovy Docs:

def map = ['a':1, 'b':2, 'c':3]
for ( e in map ) {
    print "key = ${e.key}, value = ${e.value}"
}

/*
Result:
key = a, value = 1
key = b, value = 2
key = c, value = 3
*/

One benefit of using a for loop as opposed to an each closure is easier debugging, as you cannot hit a break point inside an each closure (when using Netbeans).

7
  • I use GGTS 3.2 and routinely set break points in closures (including "each" closures). The problem is using F6 to step through a closure, as it will go over the whole thing. Technically, you can hit F5 a bunch of times and eventually end up in there, but a break point is faster.
    – Philip
    May 20, 2013 at 9:35
  • Updated answer. I am using Netbeans and its debugging of Groovy/Grails is sub-par. May 20, 2013 at 13:56
  • 5
    Plus you can break out a for loop and not in .each. Feb 17, 2015 at 14:48
  • 1
    @AlexanderSuraphel you are correct that you cannot use break to exit each, but you can use return Jul 21, 2015 at 14:30
  • 8
    @ubiquibacon no you can't. return is analogous to continue not break. Jul 21, 2015 at 15:59
23

When using the for loop, the value of s is a Map.Entry element, meaning that you can get the key from s.key and the value from s.value

1
  • 7
    Thanks for explaining why the OP's code doesn't work
    – dj18
    Feb 24, 2016 at 17:06
18

Another option:

def map = ['a':1, 'b':2, 'c':3]
map.each{
  println it.key +" "+ it.value
}

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