Why are there no ordered dictionaries?
Christoph Zwerschke
cito at online.de
Wed Nov 23 15:56:57 EST 2005
Ganesan Rajagopal wrote:
> the definition of "sorted" and "ordered", before we can > go on ? Sorted
> would be ordered by key comparison. Iterating over such a container will
> give you the keys in sorted order. Java calls this a SortedMap. See
> http://java.sun.com/j2se/1.4.2/docs/api/java/util/SortedMap.html C++ STL
> map container is also a Sorted Associative container. See
> http://www.sgi.com/tech/stl/Map.html Ganesan
Exactly, that's "sorted." "Ordered" means the same there is some order
between the existing elements, but there is no magic (i.e. a general
comparison function) for ordering new elements. Thus, if you add an
element to an ordered collection, it simply gets appended (is considered
as the greatest of all elements) by convention, whereas if you add an
element to a sorted collection, it will be inserted into the correct
place by using the comparison function.
-- Christoph
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