If I have a map that looks like:
{:a 1 :b 2 :c 3}
how can I convert it into a vector like:
[:a 1 :b 2 :c 3]
Combining into
with a cat
ting transducer is quite concise:
(into [] cat {:a 1 :b 2 :c 3})
;;=> [:a 1 :b 2 :c 3]
reverse
in ClojureScript? If it is really necessary it needs explaining …
(into [] ...)
works slightly different.
Sep 1, 2020 at 9:53
[:b 2 :a 1 :c 3]
is a perfectly valid result as well even if it is not stated in the question because as @glts points out, usually maps are not ordered in Clojure (although there is also sorted-map
in Clojure). And if you want a sorted output, I believe it would be more robust to use sort
than reverse
to accomplish that because it doesn't make any assumptions about the type of map that we flatten.
Use mapcat
and vec
to achieve it:
(vec (mapcat identity {:a 1 :b 2 :c 3}))
;; => [:a 1 :b 2 :c 3]
#'
in front of function names to designate that it is a function?
Aug 29, 2020 at 11:15
#'identity
returns the var clojure.core/identity
rather than the contained function. Var implements IFn
by assuming the contained value is a function and invoking it which is why your example works, but it's more common to use identity
so the var is derefed first before being passed to mapcat
.
Here is a simple function for this purpose
(ns demo.core
(:require
[schema.core :as s]
[tupelo.schema :as tsk]))
(s/defn keyvals :- [s/Any]
"For any map m, returns the (alternating) keys & values of m as a vector, suitable for reconstructing m via
(apply hash-map (keyvals m)). (keyvals {:a 1 :b 2} => [:a 1 :b 2] "
[m :- tsk/Map]
(reduce into [] (seq m)))
with unit test:
(ns tst.demo.core
(:use tupelo.core tupelo.test))
(dotest
(let [m1 {:a 1 :b 2 :c 3}
m2 {:a 1 :b 2 :c [3 4]}]
(is= [:a 1 :b 2 :c 3] (t/keyvals m1))
(is= m1 (apply hash-map (t/keyvals m1)))
(is= m2 (apply hash-map (t/keyvals m2)))))
As the unit test shows, keyvals
is the inverse of (apply hashmap ...)
and can be used for deconstructing a map. It can be useful when calling functions that require keyword args.
I suggest using flatten
and vec
(vec (flatten (vec {:a 1 :b 2 :c 3})))
On the repl it will look like this:
user=> (vec (flatten (vec {:a 1 :b 2 :c 3})))
[:a 1 :b 2 :c 3]
flatten
is never the right answer. Try this on an input map like {:x [1 2], :y [3 4]}
and you'll be in for a nasty surprise.
{:x [1 2], :y [3 4]}
. Maybe they want [:x 1 2 :y 3 4]
, in which case this solution works for them. Or maybe they never have nesting of collections.
(= m (apply hash-map (keyvals m)))
, and a test case your function fails. But in the grand scheme of things it doesn't matter what OP wants, it matters what they actually asked; Stack Overflow's job is to make it easy to find high-quality answers via search engines, so we want an answer that appeals to people who get here via Google.
{:a {:x :m} :b {:y :n} :c :z}
, the program may want a vector of all the nodes in the tree for any number of reasons. In this case, the result [:a :x :m :b :y :n :c :z]
would be the correct result.
[:c 3 :a 1 :b 2]
also be a valid result (with the keys visited in a different order)?MapEntry
items (i.e. key-value pairs). The key is that(apply hash-map (t/keyvals m1))
is always idempotent.