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I'm relatively new to Java and I have a question about what type of data structure would be best for my case. I have a set of data which are essentially key-value pairs, however each value may correspond to multiple keys and each key may correspond to multiple values. A simplified example would be:

  • Red-Apple
  • Green-Apple
  • Red-Strawberry
  • Green-Grapes
  • Purple-Grapes

Considering the above example, I need to be able to return what color apples I have and/or what red fruits I have. The actual data will generated dynamically based upon an input file where each set will be anywhere from 100-100,000 values and each value may correspond to hundreds of values in the other set.

What would be the most efficient way to store and parse this data? I would prefer a solution as native to java as possible rather than something such as an external database.

This question is related, but I'm not sure how to apply the solution in my case given that I would need to assign multiple values to each key in both directions.

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3 Answers 3

3

As you can't have duplicate keys in a Map, you can rather create a Map<Key, List<Value>>, or if you can, use Guava's Multimap.

Multimap<String, String> multimap = ArrayListMultimap.create();
multimap.put("Red", "Apple");
multimap.put("Red", "Strawberry");

System.out.println(multimap.get("Red"));  // Prints - [Apple, Strawberry]

But the problem is you can't ask for the keys of a given object, I'll keep looking and make and edit if I find something else, hope it helps.

Still, you can make the reverse yourself by iterating the map and finding the keys for the object.

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  • 1
    "But the problem is you can't ask for the keys of a given object." Sounds like it would be solved by a BiMultiMap. Not sure if this exists, but that's what it'd be called. Or a Directed Graph indexed on node names. Feb 20, 2015 at 19:30
  • Could you not wrap two of these within a custom object to achieve this Feb 20, 2015 at 19:59
1

I suggest you use Guava's Table structure. Use color as your row keys and fruit as your column key or the other way round. Specifically, HashBasedTable is well suited for your case.

As per your use case, you wouldn't need to store anything for the values. However, these Tables don't allow null values. You could use a dummy Boolean or any other statistical useful value, i.e. date and time of insertion, user, number of color/fruit pairs, etc.

Table has the methods you need, such as column() and row(). Bear in mind that the docs say that these structures are optimized for row access. This might be OK for you if you plan to access by one key more than by the other.

0

You can create your own custom data structure

public class MultiValueHashMap<K, V> {
     private HashMap<K, ArrayList<V>> multivalueHashMap = new HashMap<K, ArrayList<V>>();

    public static void main(String[] args) {
        MultiValueHashMap<String, String> multivaluemap = new MultiValueHashMap<String, String>();
        multivaluemap.put("Red", "Apple");
        multivaluemap.put("Green", "Apple");
        multivaluemap.put("Red", "Strawberry");
        multivaluemap.put("Green", "Grapes");
        multivaluemap.put("Purple", "Grapes");

        for(String k : multivaluemap.keySet()){
            System.out.println(k + " : " + multivaluemap.get(k).toString());
        }
    }

    public void put(K key, V value){
        if (multivalueHashMap.containsKey(key)){
            ArrayList<V> values = multivalueHashMap.get(key);
            values.add(value);
        }else{
            ArrayList<V> values  = new ArrayList<V>();
            values.add(value);
            multivalueHashMap.put(key, values);
        }
    }

    public Set<K> keySet(){
        return multivalueHashMap.keySet();
    }

    public ArrayList<V> get(K key){
        return multivalueHashMap.get(key);
    }
}

The output should be

Red : [Apple, Strawberry]

Purple : [Grapes]

Green : [Apple, Grapes]

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