Difference between revisions of "User:Nhollm"

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TDictionary is a generic data-container for key-value pairs (associative array). <br>
 
TDictionary is a generic data-container for key-value pairs (associative array). <br>
  
It was introduced with Generics.Collections (rtl-generics) in FPC 3.1.1+. It's part of the FPC Runtime Library and fully Delphi compatible.<br>
+
It was introduced with Generics.Collections (rtl-generics) in FPC 3.1.1+ and published in major release 3.2 (June 2020). It's part of the FPC Runtime Library and fully Delphi compatible.<br>
  
(Like in Delphi) The TDictionary is implemented as a hash table. This means the key-value pairs are not sorted in a defined order. (= not iterable by index??)<br>
+
(Like in Delphi) The TDictionary is implemented as a hash table. This means the key-value pairs are not sorted in a defined order. (in memory / = not iterable by index??)<br>
  
 
Both key and value can be of primitive type (e.g. integer, string, bool..) or rather complex (e.g. classes, records, arrays)
 
Both key and value can be of primitive type (e.g. integer, string, bool..) or rather complex (e.g. classes, records, arrays)
Line 159: Line 159:
 
You can set up custom Functions/Procedures which are triggered if an Key or Value got added/removed.<br>
 
You can set up custom Functions/Procedures which are triggered if an Key or Value got added/removed.<br>
 
To do this, we add 2 procedures to the class we specialize from TDictionary.<br>
 
To do this, we add 2 procedures to the class we specialize from TDictionary.<br>
The TDictionary class provides the in-build functions 'OnKeyNotify' and 'OnValueNotify'. Now we assign them to our procedures.<br>
+
The TDictionary class provides the in-build functions 'OnKeyNotify' and 'OnValueNotify'. We assign them to our procedures. (via function pointers??)<br>
 
(Hint: If you update a existing value, there is no "updated"Event. Instead "removed" followed by "added" is triggered.)
 
(Hint: If you update a existing value, there is no "updated"Event. Instead "removed" followed by "added" is triggered.)
 
TODO: get the Key Name inside the ValueNotify-Event kontext
 
TODO: get the Key Name inside the ValueNotify-Event kontext
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procedure TStrStrDictionary.DoValueNotify(ASender: TObject;constref AItem: ShortString; AAction: TCollectionNotification);
 
procedure TStrStrDictionary.DoValueNotify(ASender: TObject;constref AItem: ShortString; AAction: TCollectionNotification);
 
   begin
 
   begin
         Writeln(AAction);//can be cnRemoved or cnAdded
+
         //Writeln(AAction);//can be 'cnRemoved' or 'cnAdded'
 
         if AAction = cnAdded then
 
         if AAction = cnAdded then
 
           writeln('A Value got added, the value is:', AItem)
 
           writeln('A Value got added, the value is:', AItem)
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</syntaxhighlight>
 
</syntaxhighlight>
  
 +
 +
==Using Classes==
 +
 +
You can use classes for Keys and/or Values.
 +
Because of the fact that all created classes must be manually freed, it is strongly recommended to use TObjectDictionary instead.<br>
 +
A TObjectDictionary takes ownership of its contained classes and frees them automaticly if its freed.
 +
 +
<syntaxhighlight lang="pascal">
 +
{$mode objfpc}
 +
program example;
 +
 +
uses
 +
Generics.Collections;
 +
 +
type
 +
 +
TMyTestClass = class
 +
  Name : string;
 +
end;
 +
 +
TIntClassDictionary =  specialize TDictionary<Integer, TMyTestClass>;
 +
 +
var
 +
  MyDictionary : TIntClassDictionary;
 +
  i: integer;
 +
  MyClass : TMyTestClass;
 +
begin
 +
  MyDictionary := TIntClassDictionary.Create;
 +
  try
 +
    for i:= 0 to 5 do
 +
      begin
 +
        MyClass := TMyTestClass.Create;
 +
        MyClass.Name := 'Something';
 +
        MyDictionary.Add(i,MyClass);
 +
      end;
 +
  finally
 +
  //is this even necessary?????
 +
    for MyClass in MyDictionary.Values do
 +
      begin
 +
        MyClass.Free;
 +
      end;
 +
 +
    MyDictionary.Free;
 +
  end;
 +
end.
 +
</syntaxhighlight>
  
 
==Exceptions==
 
==Exceptions==

Latest revision as of 00:31, 16 May 2024

Warning-icon.png

Warning: All of this is subject to change. Do NOT use it until its finished. For any Questions or Input write me an E-Mail nhollm@gmx.de or write me at the forums 'nhollm'.


TDictionary

TDictionary is a generic data-container for key-value pairs (associative array).

It was introduced with Generics.Collections (rtl-generics) in FPC 3.1.1+ and published in major release 3.2 (June 2020). It's part of the FPC Runtime Library and fully Delphi compatible.

(Like in Delphi) The TDictionary is implemented as a hash table. This means the key-value pairs are not sorted in a defined order. (in memory / = not iterable by index??)

Both key and value can be of primitive type (e.g. integer, string, bool..) or rather complex (e.g. classes, records, arrays)

Basic syntax (FPC)

{$mode objfpc}
program Example;

uses
Generics.Collections;

type
TStrStrDictionary =  specialize TDictionary<string, string>;

var
  MyDictionary : TStrStrDictionary;
begin
  MyDictionary := TStrStrDictionary.Create;
  try
    //do stuff with your dictionary..
  finally
    MyDictionary.Free;
  end;
end.

See also #Delphi syntax

Usage:

Add

AddOrSetValue() is recommended, because Add() will fail, if the key already exists: 'Dublicate not allowed in Dictionary'.

Add

MyDictionary.Add('Key1', 'Value1');

AddOrSetValue

recommended

MyDictionary.AddOrSetValue('Key1', 'Value1');

Remove

MyDictionary.Remove('Key2');

If the Key does not exist, no Error is thrown.

Clear

MyDictionary.Clear;

Get Value

WriteLn(MyDictionary.Items['Key1']);

If the provided key does not exist, this will throw an Error: 'Dictionary Key does not Exist'. You can use TryGetValue() instead.

Item Count

Total number of Items in dictionary (count)

WriteLn('Items in Dictionary: ', IntToStr(MyDictionary.Count));

Loops

Loop Keys

for KeyStr in MyDictionary.Keys do
  WriteLn('Found key:', KeyStr);

Loop Values

for ValueStr in MyDictionary.Values do
  WriteLn('Found value: ', ValueStr);

Loop Key-Value-Pairs

//var KeyValuePair : TStrStrDictionary.TDictionaryPair;
for KeyValuePair in MyDictionary do
  WriteLn('Found a Pair: Key:' , KeyValuePair.Key , ' Value:' , KeyValuePair.Value);

Check If Key/Value Exists

//Check if Key exists
if MyDictionary.ContainsKey('Key1') then
  WriteLn('key exists')
else
  WriteLn('key not found');


//Check if Value exists
if MyDictionary.ContainsValue('Searched value') then
  writeln('value exists')
else
  writeln('value not found');

Trying

These functions return a boolean.
True if sucessfull, False if not. No error is thrown, so they are a good alternative to Get Value or Add().

TryAdd

if MyDictionary.TryAdd('Key','TestValue') then
  writeln('added successfully')
else
  writeln('not sucessfull');

Limitation: TryAdd does not update an existing keys value. Use AddOrSetValue() instead. (Even tho there is no feedback provided)

TryGetValue

TryGetValue takes two Arguments ->(key, value) and returns a boolean.
If found, it returns True and the provided 'value' variable becomes the value.
If not found, the function returns False and the provided 'value'-variable is nil.

//var SearchedValue: string;
if MyDictionary.TryGetValue('Key', SearchedValue) then
  WriteLn('Key found. Its value is: ' + SearchedValue)
else
  WriteLn('Could not get value');

//writeln(BoolToStr(MyDictionary.TryGetValue('Key', SearchedValue), true));

ToArray

Returns an Array of type 'TDictionaryPair'.

//var myArray :  array of TStrStrDictionary.TDictionaryPair;
myArray := MyDictionary.ToArray()
//WriteLn(length(myArray));
//WriteLn(myArray[0].Key)
//WriteLn(myArray[0].Value)

Event Notifications

You can set up custom Functions/Procedures which are triggered if an Key or Value got added/removed.
To do this, we add 2 procedures to the class we specialize from TDictionary.
The TDictionary class provides the in-build functions 'OnKeyNotify' and 'OnValueNotify'. We assign them to our procedures. (via function pointers??)
(Hint: If you update a existing value, there is no "updated"Event. Instead "removed" followed by "added" is triggered.) TODO: get the Key Name inside the ValueNotify-Event kontext

{$mode objfpc}
program Example;

uses
Generics.Collections;

type
TStrStrDictionary = Class(Specialize TDictionary<String,String>)
  private
    procedure DoKeyNotify(ASender: TObject;constref AItem: ShortString; AAction: TCollectionNotification);
    procedure DoValueNotify(ASender: TObject;constref AItem: ShortString; AAction: TCollectionNotification);
  end;

procedure TStrStrDictionary.DoKeyNotify(ASender: TObject;constref AItem: ShortString; AAction: TCollectionNotification);
   begin
        //WriteLn(AAction);//AAction can be 'cnRemoved' or 'cnAdded'
        if AAction = cnAdded then
           writeln('A Key got added, the Key is:', AItem)
        else if AAction = cnRemoved then
            writeln('A Key got removed, the Key was:', AItem)
   end;

procedure TStrStrDictionary.DoValueNotify(ASender: TObject;constref AItem: ShortString; AAction: TCollectionNotification);
   begin
        //Writeln(AAction);//can be 'cnRemoved' or 'cnAdded'
        if AAction = cnAdded then
          writeln('A Value got added, the value is:', AItem)
        else if AAction = cnRemoved then
          writeln('A Value got removed, the value was:', AItem)
   end;



var
  MyDictionary : TStrStrDictionary;
  TestArr : array of TStrStrDictionary.TDictionaryPair;
begin
  MyDictionary := TStrStrDictionary.Create;

  //Event notifications:
  MyDictionary.OnKeyNotify:=@MyDictionary.DoKeyNotify;
  MyDictionary.OnValueNotify:=@MyDictionary.DoValueNotify;

  try
    MyDictionary.AddOrSetValue('Key1', 'Value1');//triggers 'Add' Event
    MyDictionary.AddOrSetValue('Key1', 'New Value');//triggers 'Add' and 'Remove' Event
    MyDictionary.Remove('Key1');//triggers 'Remove' Event
    readln();
  finally
    MyDictionary.Free;
  end;
end.


Using Classes

You can use classes for Keys and/or Values. Because of the fact that all created classes must be manually freed, it is strongly recommended to use TObjectDictionary instead.
A TObjectDictionary takes ownership of its contained classes and frees them automaticly if its freed.

{$mode objfpc}
program example;

uses
Generics.Collections;

type

TMyTestClass = class
  Name : string;
end;

TIntClassDictionary =  specialize TDictionary<Integer, TMyTestClass>;

var
  MyDictionary : TIntClassDictionary;
  i: integer;
  MyClass : TMyTestClass;
begin
  MyDictionary := TIntClassDictionary.Create;
  try
    for i:= 0 to 5 do
      begin
         MyClass := TMyTestClass.Create;
         MyClass.Name := 'Something';
         MyDictionary.Add(i,MyClass);
      end;
  finally
   //is this even necessary?????
    for MyClass in MyDictionary.Values do
      begin
         MyClass.Free;
      end;

    MyDictionary.Free;
  end;
end.

Exceptions

To handle Exceptions, import the SysUtils Library.

{$mode objfpc}
program Example;
...
uses
... SysUtils;

try          
   WriteLn(MyDictionary.Items['KeyXY']); // Accessing a non-existing key 
except

   on E: Exception do begin
      WriteLn('An exception was raised: ', E.Message);
      WriteLn(E.ClassName);
   end;

end;

//Output:
// An exception was raised: Dictionary key does not exist
//EListError

Delphi

{$mode delphi}
uses generics.collections;
 
type  TStrIntDict = TDictionary<string,integer>;
 
    var
      MyDict : TStrIntDict;
    begin
      MyDict:=TStrIntDict.create;
      MyDict.AddorSetValue('foo',42);
      if MyDict.ContainsKey('foo') then
        WriteLn(MyDict['foo']);
    end.