Is there a way to get a list of all the keys in a Go language map? The number of elements is given by len()
, but if I have a map like:
m := map[string]string{ "key1":"val1", "key2":"val2" };
How do I iterate over all the keys?
https://play.golang.org/p/JGZ7mN0-U-
for k, v := range m {
fmt.Printf("key[%s] value[%s]\n", k, v)
}
or
for k := range m {
fmt.Printf("key[%s] value[%s]\n", k, m[k])
}
Go language specs for for
statements specifies that the first value is the key, the second variable is the value, but doesn't have to be present.
Here's some easy way to get slice
of the map-keys.
// Return keys of the given map
func Keys(m map[string]interface{}) (keys []string) {
for k := range m {
keys = append(keys, k)
}
return keys
}
// use `Keys` func
func main() {
m := map[string]interface{}{
"foo": 1,
"bar": true,
"baz": "baz",
}
fmt.Println(Keys(m)) // [foo bar baz]
}
Keys
function to take a map with keys of any type, not just strings?
Feb 9, 2015 at 3:32
func Keys(m map[interface{}]interface{}) (keys []interface{})
, @RobertT.McGibbon you need to change the function "prototype"
map[interface{}]interface{}
. Go does not support generics. You can't create a function with a map
parameter which accepts maps with different key types.
Is there a way to get a list of all the keys in a Go language map?
ks := reflect.ValueOf(m).MapKeys()
how do I iterate over all the keys?
Use the accepted answer:
for _, k := range m { ... }
for _, k := range v.MapKeys()
, since in your example, k
would be the int index of the slice of keys
Apr 23, 2019 at 14:05
A Type agnostic solution:
for _, key := range reflect.ValueOf(yourMap).MapKeys() {
value := yourMap.MapIndex(key).Interface()
fmt.Println("Key:", key, "Value:", value)
}
Using Generics:
func Keys[K comparable, V any](m map[K]V) []K {
keys := make([]K, 0, len(m))
for k := range m {
keys = append(keys, k)
}
return keys
}
For sorted keys of map[string]string.
package main
import (
"fmt"
"sort"
)
func main() {
m := map[string]string{"key1": "val1", "key2": "val2"}
sortStringMap(m)
}
// sortStringMap prints the [string]string as keys sorted
func sortStringMap(m map[string]string) {
var keys []string
for key := range m {
keys = append(keys, key)
}
sort.Strings(keys) // sort the keys
for _, key := range keys {
fmt.Printf("%s\t:%s\n", key, m[key])
}
}
output:
key1 :val1
key2 :val2