Let's imagine the following immutable Map:
val foo = Map((10,"ten"), (100,"one hundred"))
I want to get the key of the first element.
foo.head
gets the first element. But what next?
I also want the value of this element, i.e. "ten"
Set a key/value pair:
val (key, value) = foo.head
Map.head returns a tuple, so you can use _1 and _2 to get its index and value.
scala> val foo = Map((10,"ten"), (100,"one hundred"))
foo: scala.collection.immutable.Map[Int,java.lang.String] = Map(10 -> ten, 100 -
> one hundred)
scala> val hd=foo.head
hd: (Int, java.lang.String) = (10,ten)
scala> hd._1
res0: Int = 10
scala> hd._2
res1: java.lang.String = ten
I must say that @Paolo Falabella had the best answer, as using
val (key, value) = foo.head
in a tail-recursive method will lead to a crash!
So it is much better/more versatile to use
val myMap = Map("Hello" ->"world", "Hi" -> "Everybody")
print(myMap.head._1)
which would print "Hello" and won't cause a crash in a tails recursive method.
Map
s aren't sorted. So 'first' isn't always what you think it is. Just keep that in mind :-)