30

The compiler complains about this code:

    HashMap<String,int> userName2ind = new HashMap<String,int>();
    for (int i=0; i<=players.length; i++) {
        userName2ind.put(orderedUserNames[i],i+1);
    }

It writes "unexpected type" and point on int. If I replace int by String and i+1 by i+"1", the compilation goes OK. What is wrong with in here?

4
  • Doesn't i+"1" ends up being "01" for i==0; "11" for i==1 etc?
    – extraneon
    Mar 24, 2010 at 15:28
  • Yes. i+"1" ends up being "01" for i==0 and so on.
    – Roman
    Mar 24, 2010 at 15:33
  • googling "java hashmap int" points to many references that already have asked/ solved this issue. Research your question first. Apr 24, 2014 at 22:42
  • Simple answer: generics, long answer: java generics are weird and don't actually exist (it's all compiler trickery) so ints are a nono. Sep 24, 2016 at 0:57

2 Answers 2

50

It's fine with Integer, but not okay with int - Java generics only work with reference types, basically :(

Try this - although be aware it will box everything:

HashMap<String,Integer> userName2ind = new HashMap<String,Integer>();
for (int i=0; i<=players.length; i++) {
    userName2ind.put(orderedUserNames[i],i+1);
}
2

If you have small collections, then using reference types is probably fine, but there are alternatives and good one is trove4j. Trove does a pretty good job of recreating the collections API using pure primitives. The payoff is much lower memory usage and in many cases, better performance when inserting/looking up. Your example would look like this:

TObjectIntHashMap<String> userName2ind = new TObjectIntHashMap<String>();
for (int i=0; i<=players.length; i++) {
    userName2ind.put(orderedUserNames[i],i+1);
}

The only downside, in my experience, is the absence of concurrent implementations of these, so you have to figure out another way to manage thread safety.

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