Types
Table[A; B] = object root: Node[A, B] entries: int
-
Generic sorted table, consisting of key-value pairs.
root and entries are internal implementation details which cannot be directly accessed.
For creating an empty Table, use initTable proc.
Source Edit TableRef[A; B] = ref Table[A, B]
-
Ref version of Table.
For creating a new empty TableRef, use newTable proc.
Source Edit OrderedTable[A; B] = object data: seq[(A, B)] byKey: Table[A, int]
-
Table that remembers insertion order.
For creating an empty OrderedTable, use initOrderedTable proc.
Source Edit OrderedTableRef[A; B] = ref OrderedTable[A, B]
-
Ref version of OrderedTable.
For creating a new empty OrderedTableRef, use newOrderedTable proc.
Source Edit CountTable[A] = object data: Table[A, int]
-
Table that counts the number of each key.
For creating an empty CountTable, use initCountTable proc.
Source Edit CountTableRef[A] = ref CountTable[A]
-
Ref version of CountTable.
For creating a new empty CountTableRef, use newCountTable proc.
Source Edit
Procs
proc initTable[A, B](initialSize = 0): Table[A, B]
-
Creates a new empty Table.
The initialSize parameter is there to be compatible with the hash table API, it has no effect on BTree tables.
See also:
- toTable proc
- newTable proc for creating a TableRef
Example:
let a = initTable[int, string]() b = initTable[char, seq[int]]()
Source Edit proc toTable[A, B](pairs: openArray[(A, B)]): Table[A, B]
-
Creates a new Table which contains the given pairs.
pairs is a container consisting of (key, value) tuples.
See also:
- initTable proc
- newTable proc for a TableRef version
Example:
let a = [('a', 5), ('b', 9)] let b = toTable(a) assert b == {'a': 5, 'b': 9}.toTable
Source Edit proc getOrDefault[A, B](t: Table[A, B]; x: A): B
-
Retrieves the value at t[key] if key is in t. Otherwise, the default initialization value for type B is returned (e.g. 0 for any integer type).
See also:
- [] proc for retrieving a value of a key
- hasKey proc
- hasKeyOrPut proc
- mgetOrPut proc
- getOrDefault proc to return a custom value if the key doesn't exist
Example:
let a = {'a': 5, 'b': 9}.toTable doAssert a.getOrDefault('a') == 5 doAssert a.getOrDefault('z') == 0
Source Edit proc getOrDefault[A, B](t: Table[A, B]; x: A; default: B): B
-
Retrieves the value at t[key] if key is in t. Otherwise, default is returned.
See also:
- [] proc for retrieving a value of a key
- hasKey proc
- hasKeyOrPut proc
- mgetOrPut proc
- getOrDefault proc to return a default value (e.g. zero for int) if the key doesn't exist
Example:
let a = {'a': 5, 'b': 9}.toTable doAssert a.getOrDefault('a', 99) == 5 doAssert a.getOrDefault('z', 99) == 99
Source Edit proc `[]`[A, B](t: Table[A, B]; x: A): B
-
Retrieves the value at t[key].
If key is not in t, the KeyError exception is raised. One can check with hasKey proc whether the key exists.
See also:
- getOrDefault proc to return a default value (e.g. zero for int) if the key doesn't exist
- getOrDefault proc to return a custom value if the key doesn't exist
- []= proc for inserting a new (key, value) pair in the table
- hasKey proc for checking if a key is in the table
Example:
let a = {'a': 5, 'b': 9}.toTable doAssert a['a'] == 5 doAssertRaises(KeyError): echo a['z']
Source Edit proc `[]`[A, B](t: var Table[A, B]; x: A): var B
-
Retrieves the value at t[key]. The value can be modified.
If key is not in t, the KeyError exception is raised.
See also:
- getOrDefault proc to return a default value (e.g. zero for int) if the key doesn't exist
- getOrDefault proc to return a custom value if the key doesn't exist
- []= proc for inserting a new (key, value) pair in the table
- hasKey proc for checking if a key is in the table
proc hasKey[A, B](t: Table[A, B]; x: A): bool
-
Returns true if key is in the table t.
See also:
- contains proc for use with the in operator
- [] proc for retrieving a value of a key
- getOrDefault proc to return a default value (e.g. zero for int) if the key doesn't exist
- getOrDefault proc to return a custom value if the key doesn't exist
proc contains[A, B](t: Table[A, B]; x: A): bool
-
Alias of hasKey proc for use with the in operator.
Example:
let a = {'a': 5, 'b': 9}.toTable doAssert 'b' in a == true doAssert a.contains('z') == false
Source Edit proc `[]=`[A, B](t: var Table[A, B]; key: A; val: B)
-
Inserts a (key, value) pair into t.
See also:
- [] proc for retrieving a value of a key
- hasKeyOrPut proc
- mgetOrPut proc
- del proc for removing a key from the table
Example:
var a = initTable[char, int]() a['x'] = 7 a['y'] = 33 doAssert a == {'x': 7, 'y': 33}.toTable
Source Edit proc hasKeyOrPut[A, B](t: var Table[A, B]; key: A; val: B): bool
-
Returns true if key is in the table, otherwise inserts value.
See also:
- hasKey proc
- [] proc for retrieving a value of a key
- getOrDefault proc to return a default value (e.g. zero for int) if the key doesn't exist
- getOrDefault proc to return a custom value if the key doesn't exist
Example:
var a = {'a': 5, 'b': 9}.toTable if a.hasKeyOrPut('a', 50): a['a'] = 99 if a.hasKeyOrPut('z', 50): a['z'] = 99 doAssert a == {'a': 99, 'b': 9, 'z': 50}.toTable
Source Edit proc mgetOrPut[A, B](t: var Table[A, B]; key: A; val: B): var B
-
Retrieves value at t[key] or puts val if not present, either way returning a value which can be modified.
See also:
- [] proc for retrieving a value of a key
- hasKey proc
- hasKeyOrPut proc
- getOrDefault proc to return a default value (e.g. zero for int) if the key doesn't exist
- getOrDefault proc to return a custom value if the key doesn't exist
Example:
var a = {'a': 5, 'b': 9}.toTable doAssert a.mgetOrPut('a', 99) == 5 doAssert a.mgetOrPut('z', 99) == 99 doAssert a == {'a': 5, 'b': 9, 'z': 99}.toTable
Source Edit proc del[A, B](t: var Table[A, B]; key: A)
-
Deletes key from table t. Does nothing if the key does not exist.
See also:
- pop proc
- clear proc to empty the whole table
Example:
var a = {'a': 5, 'b': 9, 'c': 13}.toTable a.del('a') doAssert a == {'b': 9, 'c': 13}.toTable a.del('z') doAssert a == {'b': 9, 'c': 13}.toTable
Source Edit proc pop[A, B](t: var Table[A, B]; key: A; val: var B): bool
-
Deletes the key from the table. Returns true, if the key existed, and sets val to the mapping of the key. Otherwise, returns false, and the val is unchanged.
See also:
- del proc
- clear proc to empty the whole table
Example:
var a = {'a': 5, 'b': 9, 'c': 13}.toTable i: int doAssert a.pop('b', i) == true doAssert a == {'a': 5, 'c': 13}.toTable doAssert i == 9 i = 0 doAssert a.pop('z', i) == false doAssert a == {'a': 5, 'c': 13}.toTable doAssert i == 0
Source Edit proc take[A, B](t: var Table[A, B]; key: A; val: var B): bool
- Alias for: Source Edit
proc clear[A, B](t: var Table[A, B])
-
Resets the table so that it is empty.
See also:
Example:
var a = {'a': 5, 'b': 9, 'c': 13}.toTable doAssert len(a) == 3 clear(a) doAssert len(a) == 0
Source Edit proc len[A, B](t: Table[A, B]): int {...}{.inline.}
-
Returns the number of keys in t.
Example:
let a = {'a': 5, 'b': 9}.toTable doAssert len(a) == 2
Source Edit proc `$`[A, B](t: Table[A, B]): string
- The $ operator for tables. Used internally when calling echo on a table. Source Edit
proc `==`[A, B](a, b: Table[A, B]): bool
-
The == operator for Tables.
Returns true if the content of both tables contains the same key-value pairs. Insert order does not matter.
Example:
let a = {'a': 5, 'b': 9, 'c': 13}.toTable b = {'b': 9, 'c': 13, 'a': 5}.toTable doAssert a == b
Source Edit proc newTable[A, B](): TableRef[A, B]
-
Creates a new ref table that is empty.
initialSize must be a power of two (default: 64). If you need to accept runtime values for this you could use the nextPowerOfTwo proc from the math module or the rightSize proc from this module.
See also:
- newTable proc for creating a TableRef from a collection of (key, value) pairs
- initTable proc for creating a Table
Example:
let a = newTable[int, string]() b = newTable[char, seq[int]]()
Source Edit proc newTable[A, B](pairs: openArray[(A, B)]): TableRef[A, B]
-
Creates a new ref table that contains the given pairs.
pairs is a container consisting of (key, value) tuples.
See also:
- newTable proc
- toTable proc for a Table version
Example:
let a = [('a', 5), ('b', 9)] let b = newTable(a) assert b == {'a': 5, 'b': 9}.newTable
Source Edit proc newTableFrom[A, B, C](collection: A; index: proc (x: B): C): TableRef[C, B]
- Index the collection with the proc provided. Source Edit
proc `[]`[A, B](t: TableRef[A, B]; key: A): var B
-
Retrieves the value at t[key].
If key is not in t, the KeyError exception is raised. One can check with hasKey proc whether the key exists.
See also:
- getOrDefault proc to return a default value (e.g. zero for int) if the key doesn't exist
- getOrDefault proc to return a custom value if the key doesn't exist
- []= proc for inserting a new (key, value) pair in the table
- hasKey proc for checking if a key is in the table
Example:
let a = {'a': 5, 'b': 9}.newTable doAssert a['a'] == 5 doAssertRaises(KeyError): echo a['z']
Source Edit proc `[]=`[A, B](t: TableRef[A, B]; key: A; val: B)
-
Inserts a (key, value) pair into t.
See also:
- [] proc for retrieving a value of a key
- hasKeyOrPut proc
- mgetOrPut proc
- del proc for removing a key from the table
Example:
var a = newTable[char, int]() a['x'] = 7 a['y'] = 33 doAssert a == {'x': 7, 'y': 33}.newTable
Source Edit proc hasKey[A, B](t: TableRef[A, B]; key: A): bool
-
Returns true if key is in the table t.
See also:
- contains proc for use with the in operator
- [] proc for retrieving a value of a key
- getOrDefault proc to return a default value (e.g. zero for int) if the key doesn't exist
- getOrDefault proc to return a custom value if the key doesn't exist
Example:
let a = {'a': 5, 'b': 9}.newTable doAssert a.hasKey('a') == true doAssert a.hasKey('z') == false
Source Edit proc contains[A, B](t: TableRef[A, B]; key: A): bool
-
Alias of hasKey proc for use with the in operator.
Example:
let a = {'a': 5, 'b': 9}.newTable doAssert 'b' in a == true doAssert a.contains('z') == false
Source Edit proc hasKeyOrPut[A, B](t: var TableRef[A, B]; key: A; val: B): bool
-
Returns true if key is in the table, otherwise inserts value.
See also:
- hasKey proc
- [] proc for retrieving a value of a key
- getOrDefault proc to return a default value (e.g. zero for int) if the key doesn't exist
- getOrDefault proc to return a custom value if the key doesn't exist
Example:
var a = {'a': 5, 'b': 9}.newTable if a.hasKeyOrPut('a', 50): a['a'] = 99 if a.hasKeyOrPut('z', 50): a['z'] = 99 doAssert a == {'a': 99, 'b': 9, 'z': 50}.newTable
Source Edit proc getOrDefault[A, B](t: TableRef[A, B]; key: A): B
-
Retrieves the value at t[key] if key is in t. Otherwise, the default initialization value for type B is returned (e.g. 0 for any integer type).
See also:
- [] proc for retrieving a value of a key
- hasKey proc
- hasKeyOrPut proc
- mgetOrPut proc
- getOrDefault proc to return a custom value if the key doesn't exist
Example:
let a = {'a': 5, 'b': 9}.newTable doAssert a.getOrDefault('a') == 5 doAssert a.getOrDefault('z') == 0
Source Edit proc getOrDefault[A, B](t: TableRef[A, B]; key: A; default: B): B
-
Retrieves the value at t[key] if key is in t. Otherwise, default is returned.
See also:
- [] proc for retrieving a value of a key
- hasKey proc
- hasKeyOrPut proc
- mgetOrPut proc
- getOrDefault proc to return a default value (e.g. zero for int) if the key doesn't exist
Example:
let a = {'a': 5, 'b': 9}.newTable doAssert a.getOrDefault('a', 99) == 5 doAssert a.getOrDefault('z', 99) == 99
Source Edit proc mgetOrPut[A, B](t: TableRef[A, B]; key: A; val: B): var B
-
Retrieves value at t[key] or puts val if not present, either way returning a value which can be modified.
See also:
- [] proc for retrieving a value of a key
- hasKey proc
- hasKeyOrPut proc
- getOrDefault proc to return a default value (e.g. zero for int) if the key doesn't exist
- getOrDefault proc to return a custom value if the key doesn't exist
Example:
var a = {'a': 5, 'b': 9}.newTable doAssert a.mgetOrPut('a', 99) == 5 doAssert a.mgetOrPut('z', 99) == 99 doAssert a == {'a': 5, 'b': 9, 'z': 99}.newTable
Source Edit proc len[A, B](t: TableRef[A, B]): int
-
Returns the number of keys in t.
Example:
let a = {'a': 5, 'b': 9}.newTable doAssert len(a) == 2
Source Edit proc del[A, B](t: TableRef[A, B]; key: A)
-
Deletes key from table t. Does nothing if the key does not exist.
If duplicate keys were added, this may need to be called multiple times.
See also:
- pop proc
- clear proc to empty the whole table
Example:
var a = {'a': 5, 'b': 9, 'c': 13}.newTable a.del('a') doAssert a == {'b': 9, 'c': 13}.newTable a.del('z') doAssert a == {'b': 9, 'c': 13}.newTable
Source Edit proc pop[A, B](t: TableRef[A, B]; key: A; val: var B): bool
-
Deletes the key from the table. Returns true, if the key existed, and sets val to the mapping of the key. Otherwise, returns false, and the val is unchanged.
If duplicate keys were added, this may need to be called multiple times.
See also:
- del proc
- clear proc to empty the whole table
Example:
var a = {'a': 5, 'b': 9, 'c': 13}.newTable i: int doAssert a.pop('b', i) == true doAssert a == {'a': 5, 'c': 13}.newTable doAssert i == 9 i = 0 doAssert a.pop('z', i) == false doAssert a == {'a': 5, 'c': 13}.newTable doAssert i == 0
Source Edit proc take[A, B](t: TableRef[A, B]; key: A; val: var B): bool {...}{.inline.}
- Alias for: Source Edit
proc clear[A, B](t: TableRef[A, B])
-
Resets the table so that it is empty.
See also:
Example:
var a = {'a': 5, 'b': 9, 'c': 13}.newTable doAssert len(a) == 3 clear(a) doAssert len(a) == 0
Source Edit proc `$`[A, B](t: TableRef[A, B]): string
- The $ operator for tables. Used internally when calling echo on a table. Source Edit
proc `==`[A, B](s, t: TableRef[A, B]): bool
-
The == operator for tables. Returns true if either both tables are nil, or neither is nil and the content of both tables contains the same key-value pairs. Insert order does not matter.
Example:
let a = {'a': 5, 'b': 9, 'c': 13}.newTable b = {'b': 9, 'c': 13, 'a': 5}.newTable doAssert a == b
Source Edit proc initOrderedTable[A, B](initialSize = 64): OrderedTable[A, B]
-
Creates a new ordered table that is empty.
Starting from Nim v0.20, tables are initialized by default and it is not necessary to call this function explicitly.
See also:
- toOrderedTable proc
- newOrderedTable proc for creating an OrderedTableRef
Example:
let a = initOrderedTable[int, string]() b = initOrderedTable[char, seq[int]]()
Source Edit proc `[]=`[A, B](t: var OrderedTable[A, B]; k: A; v: B)
-
Inserts a (key, value) pair into t.
See also:
- [] proc for retrieving a value of a key
- hasKeyOrPut proc
- mgetOrPut proc
- del proc for removing a key from the table
Example:
var a = initOrderedTable[char, int]() a['x'] = 7 a['y'] = 33 doAssert a == {'x': 7, 'y': 33}.toOrderedTable
Source Edit proc toOrderedTable[A, B](pairs: openArray[(A, B)]): OrderedTable[A, B]
-
Creates a new ordered table that contains the given pairs.
pairs is a container consisting of (key, value) tuples.
See also:
- initOrderedTable proc
- newOrderedTable proc for an OrderedTableRef version
Example:
let a = [('a', 5), ('b', 9)] let b = toOrderedTable(a) assert b == {'a': 5, 'b': 9}.toOrderedTable
Source Edit proc `[]`[A, B](t: OrderedTable[A, B]; key: A): B
-
Retrieves the value at t[key].
If key is not in t, the KeyError exception is raised. One can check with hasKey proc whether the key exists.
See also:
- getOrDefault proc to return a default value (e.g. zero for int) if the key doesn't exist
- getOrDefault proc to return a custom value if the key doesn't exist
- []= proc for inserting a new (key, value) pair in the table
- hasKey proc for checking if a key is in the table
Example:
let a = {'a': 5, 'b': 9}.toOrderedTable doAssert a['a'] == 5 doAssertRaises(KeyError): echo a['z']
Source Edit proc `[]`[A, B](t: var OrderedTable[A, B]; key: A): var B
-
Retrieves the value at t[key]. The value can be modified.
If key is not in t, the KeyError exception is raised.
See also:
- getOrDefault proc to return a default value (e.g. zero for int) if the key doesn't exist
- getOrDefault proc to return a custom value if the key doesn't exist
- []= proc for inserting a new (key, value) pair in the table
- hasKey proc for checking if a key is in the table
proc hasKey[A, B](t: OrderedTable[A, B]; key: A): bool
-
Returns true if key is in the table t.
See also:
- contains proc for use with the in operator
- [] proc for retrieving a value of a key
- getOrDefault proc to return a default value (e.g. zero for int) if the key doesn't exist
- getOrDefault proc to return a custom value if the key doesn't exist
Example:
let a = {'a': 5, 'b': 9}.toOrderedTable doAssert a.hasKey('a') == true doAssert a.hasKey('z') == false
Source Edit proc contains[A, B](t: OrderedTable[A, B]; key: A): bool
-
Alias of hasKey proc for use with the in operator.
Example:
let a = {'a': 5, 'b': 9}.toOrderedTable doAssert 'b' in a == true doAssert a.contains('z') == false
Source Edit proc hasKeyOrPut[A, B](t: var OrderedTable[A, B]; key: A; val: B): bool
-
Returns true if key is in the table, otherwise inserts value.
See also:
- hasKey proc
- [] proc for retrieving a value of a key
- getOrDefault proc to return a default value (e.g. zero for int) if the key doesn't exist
- getOrDefault proc to return a custom value if the key doesn't exist
Example:
var a = {'a': 5, 'b': 9}.toOrderedTable if a.hasKeyOrPut('a', 50): a['a'] = 99 if a.hasKeyOrPut('z', 50): a['z'] = 99 doAssert a == {'a': 99, 'b': 9, 'z': 50}.toOrderedTable
Source Edit proc getOrDefault[A, B](t: OrderedTable[A, B]; key: A): B
-
Retrieves the value at t[key] if key is in t. Otherwise, the default initialization value for type B is returned (e.g. 0 for any integer type).
See also:
- [] proc for retrieving a value of a key
- hasKey proc
- hasKeyOrPut proc
- mgetOrPut proc
- getOrDefault proc to return a custom value if the key doesn't exist
Example:
let a = {'a': 5, 'b': 9}.toOrderedTable doAssert a.getOrDefault('a') == 5 doAssert a.getOrDefault('z') == 0
Source Edit proc getOrDefault[A, B](t: OrderedTable[A, B]; key: A; default: B): B
-
Retrieves the value at t[key] if key is in t. Otherwise, default is returned.
See also:
- [] proc for retrieving a value of a key
- hasKey proc
- hasKeyOrPut proc
- mgetOrPut proc
- getOrDefault proc to return a default value (e.g. zero for int) if the key doesn't exist
Example:
let a = {'a': 5, 'b': 9}.toOrderedTable doAssert a.getOrDefault('a', 99) == 5 doAssert a.getOrDefault('z', 99) == 99
Source Edit proc mgetOrPut[A, B](t: var OrderedTable[A, B]; key: A; val: B): var B
-
Retrieves value at t[key] or puts val if not present, either way returning a value which can be modified.
See also:
- [] proc for retrieving a value of a key
- hasKey proc
- hasKeyOrPut proc
- getOrDefault proc to return a default value (e.g. zero for int) if the key doesn't exist
- getOrDefault proc to return a custom value if the key doesn't exist
Example:
var a = {'a': 5, 'b': 9}.toOrderedTable doAssert a.mgetOrPut('a', 99) == 5 doAssert a.mgetOrPut('z', 99) == 99 doAssert a == {'a': 5, 'b': 9, 'z': 99}.toOrderedTable
Source Edit proc len[A, B](t: OrderedTable[A, B]): int {...}{.inline.}
-
Returns the number of keys in t.
Example:
let a = {'a': 5, 'b': 9}.toOrderedTable doAssert len(a) == 2
Source Edit proc add[A, B](t: var OrderedTable[A, B]; key: A; val: B)
- Source Edit
proc del[A, B](t: var OrderedTable[A, B]; key: A)
-
Deletes key from table t. Does nothing if the key does not exist.
NOTE: This proc is destructive: the original order of the elements is not preserved!
If you want to keep the order of elements after removal, use delete proc.
See also:
- delete proc
- pop proc
- clear proc to empty the whole table
Example:
var a = {'a': 5, 'b': 9, 'c': 13}.toOrderedTable a.del('a') doAssert a == {'c': 13, 'b': 9}.toOrderedTable a.del('z') doAssert a == {'c': 13, 'b': 9}.toOrderedTable
Source Edit proc delete[A, B](t: var OrderedTable[A, B]; key: A)
-
Deletes key from table t. Does nothing if the key does not exist.
O(n) complexity.
See also:
- del proc for faster version which doesn't preserve the order
- pop proc
- clear proc to empty the whole table
Example:
var a = {'a': 5, 'b': 9, 'c': 13}.toOrderedTable a.delete('a') doAssert a == {'b': 9, 'c': 13}.toOrderedTable a.delete('z') doAssert a == {'b': 9, 'c': 13}.toOrderedTable
Source Edit proc pop[A, B](t: var OrderedTable[A, B]; key: A; val: var B): bool
-
Deletes the key from the table. Returns true, if the key existed, and sets val to the mapping of the key. Otherwise, returns false, and the val is unchanged.
O(n) complexity.
See also:
- del proc
- delete proc
- clear proc to empty the whole table
Example:
var a = {'c': 5, 'b': 9, 'a': 13}.toOrderedTable i: int doAssert a.pop('b', i) == true doAssert a == {'c': 5, 'a': 13}.toOrderedTable doAssert i == 9 i = 0 doAssert a.pop('z', i) == false doAssert a == {'c': 5, 'a': 13}.toOrderedTable doAssert i == 0
Source Edit proc clear[A, B](t: var OrderedTable[A, B])
-
Resets the table so that it is empty.
See also:
Example:
var a = {'a': 5, 'b': 9, 'c': 13}.toOrderedTable doAssert len(a) == 3 clear(a) doAssert len(a) == 0
Source Edit proc `$`[A, B](t: OrderedTable[A, B]): string
- The $ operator for ordered tables. Used internally when calling echo on a table. Source Edit
proc `==`[A, B](s, t: OrderedTable[A, B]): bool
-
The == operator for ordered tables. Returns true if both the content and the order are equal.
Example:
let a = {'a': 5, 'b': 9, 'c': 13}.toOrderedTable b = {'b': 9, 'c': 13, 'a': 5}.toOrderedTable doAssert a != b
Source Edit proc newOrderedTable[A, B](initialSize = 64): OrderedTableRef[A, B]
-
Creates a new ordered ref table that is empty.
See also:
- newOrderedTable proc for creating an OrderedTableRef from a collection of (key, value) pairs
- initOrderedTable proc for creating an OrderedTable
Example:
let a = newOrderedTable[int, string]() b = newOrderedTable[char, seq[int]]()
Source Edit proc newOrderedTable[A, B](pairs: openArray[(A, B)]): OrderedTableRef[A, B]
-
Creates a new ordered ref table that contains the given pairs.
pairs is a container consisting of (key, value) tuples.
See also:
- newOrderedTable proc
- toOrderedTable proc for an OrderedTable version
Example:
let a = [('a', 5), ('b', 9)] let b = newOrderedTable(a) assert b == {'a': 5, 'b': 9}.newOrderedTable
Source Edit proc `[]`[A, B](t: OrderedTableRef[A, B]; key: A): var B
-
Retrieves the value at t[key].
If key is not in t, the KeyError exception is raised. One can check with hasKey proc whether the key exists.
See also:
- getOrDefault proc to return a default value (e.g. zero for int) if the key doesn't exist
- getOrDefault proc to return a custom value if the key doesn't exist
- []= proc for inserting a new (key, value) pair in the table
- hasKey proc for checking if a key is in the table
Example:
let a = {'a': 5, 'b': 9}.newOrderedTable doAssert a['a'] == 5 doAssertRaises(KeyError): echo a['z']
Source Edit proc `[]=`[A, B](t: OrderedTableRef[A, B]; key: A; val: B)
-
Inserts a (key, value) pair into t.
See also:
- [] proc for retrieving a value of a key
- hasKeyOrPut proc
- mgetOrPut proc
- del proc for removing a key from the table
Example:
var a = newOrderedTable[char, int]() a['x'] = 7 a['y'] = 33 doAssert a == {'x': 7, 'y': 33}.newOrderedTable
Source Edit proc hasKey[A, B](t: OrderedTableRef[A, B]; key: A): bool
-
Returns true if key is in the table t.
See also:
- contains proc for use with the in operator
- [] proc for retrieving a value of a key
- getOrDefault proc to return a default value (e.g. zero for int) if the key doesn't exist
- getOrDefault proc to return a custom value if the key doesn't exist
Example:
let a = {'a': 5, 'b': 9}.newOrderedTable doAssert a.hasKey('a') == true doAssert a.hasKey('z') == false
Source Edit proc contains[A, B](t: OrderedTableRef[A, B]; key: A): bool
-
Alias of hasKey proc for use with the in operator.
Example:
let a = {'a': 5, 'b': 9}.newOrderedTable doAssert 'b' in a == true doAssert a.contains('z') == false
Source Edit proc hasKeyOrPut[A, B](t: var OrderedTableRef[A, B]; key: A; val: B): bool
-
Returns true if key is in the table, otherwise inserts value.
See also:
- hasKey proc
- [] proc for retrieving a value of a key
- getOrDefault proc to return a default value (e.g. zero for int) if the key doesn't exist
- getOrDefault proc to return a custom value if the key doesn't exist
Example:
var a = {'a': 5, 'b': 9}.newOrderedTable if a.hasKeyOrPut('a', 50): a['a'] = 99 if a.hasKeyOrPut('z', 50): a['z'] = 99 doAssert a == {'a': 99, 'b': 9, 'z': 50}.newOrderedTable
Source Edit proc getOrDefault[A, B](t: OrderedTableRef[A, B]; key: A): B
-
Retrieves the value at t[key] if key is in t. Otherwise, the default initialization value for type B is returned (e.g. 0 for any integer type).
See also:
- [] proc for retrieving a value of a key
- hasKey proc
- hasKeyOrPut proc
- mgetOrPut proc
- getOrDefault proc to return a custom value if the key doesn't exist
Example:
let a = {'a': 5, 'b': 9}.newOrderedTable doAssert a.getOrDefault('a') == 5 doAssert a.getOrDefault('z') == 0
Source Edit proc getOrDefault[A, B](t: OrderedTableRef[A, B]; key: A; default: B): B
-
Retrieves the value at t[key] if key is in t. Otherwise, default is returned.
See also:
- [] proc for retrieving a value of a key
- hasKey proc
- hasKeyOrPut proc
- mgetOrPut proc
- getOrDefault proc to return a default value (e.g. zero for int) if the key doesn't exist
Example:
let a = {'a': 5, 'b': 9}.newOrderedTable doAssert a.getOrDefault('a', 99) == 5 doAssert a.getOrDefault('z', 99) == 99
Source Edit proc mgetOrPut[A, B](t: OrderedTableRef[A, B]; key: A; val: B): var B
-
Retrieves value at t[key] or puts val if not present, either way returning a value which can be modified.
See also:
- [] proc for retrieving a value of a key
- hasKey proc
- hasKeyOrPut proc
- getOrDefault proc to return a default value (e.g. zero for int) if the key doesn't exist
- getOrDefault proc to return a custom value if the key doesn't exist
Example:
var a = {'a': 5, 'b': 9}.newOrderedTable doAssert a.mgetOrPut('a', 99) == 5 doAssert a.mgetOrPut('z', 99) == 99 doAssert a == {'a': 5, 'b': 9, 'z': 99}.newOrderedTable
Source Edit proc len[A, B](t: OrderedTableRef[A, B]): int {...}{.inline.}
-
Returns the number of keys in t.
Example:
let a = {'a': 5, 'b': 9}.newOrderedTable doAssert len(a) == 2
Source Edit proc del[A, B](t: OrderedTableRef[A, B]; key: A)
-
Deletes key from table t. Does nothing if the key does not exist.
NOTE: This proc is destructive: the original order of the elements is not preserved!
If you want to keep the order of elements after removal, use delete proc.
See also:
- delete proc
- pop proc
- clear proc to empty the whole table
Example:
var a = {'a': 5, 'b': 9, 'c': 13}.newOrderedTable a.del('a') doAssert a == {'c': 13, 'b': 9}.newOrderedTable a.del('z') doAssert a == {'c': 13, 'b': 9}.newOrderedTable
Source Edit proc delete[A, B](t: OrderedTableRef[A, B]; key: A)
-
Deletes key from table t. Does nothing if the key does not exist.
O(n) complexity.
See also:
- del proc for faster version which doesn't preserve the order
- pop proc
- clear proc to empty the whole table
Example:
var a = {'a': 5, 'b': 9, 'c': 13}.toOrderedTable a.delete('a') doAssert a == {'b': 9, 'c': 13}.toOrderedTable a.delete('z') doAssert a == {'b': 9, 'c': 13}.toOrderedTable
Source Edit proc pop[A, B](t: OrderedTableRef[A, B]; key: A; val: var B): bool
-
Deletes the key from the table. Returns true, if the key existed, and sets val to the mapping of the key. Otherwise, returns false, and the val is unchanged.
See also:
- del proc
- clear proc to empty the whole table
Example:
var a = {'c': 5, 'b': 9, 'a': 13}.newOrderedTable i: int doAssert a.pop('b', i) == true doAssert a == {'c': 5, 'a': 13}.newOrderedTable doAssert i == 9 i = 0 doAssert a.pop('z', i) == false doAssert a == {'c': 5, 'a': 13}.newOrderedTable doAssert i == 0
Source Edit proc clear[A, B](t: OrderedTableRef[A, B])
-
Resets the table so that it is empty.
See also:
Example:
var a = {'a': 5, 'b': 9, 'c': 13}.newOrderedTable doAssert len(a) == 3 clear(a) doAssert len(a) == 0
Source Edit proc `$`[A, B](t: OrderedTableRef[A, B]): string
- The $ operator for ordered tables. Used internally when calling echo on a table. Source Edit
proc `==`[A, B](s, t: OrderedTableRef[A, B]): bool
-
The == operator for ordered tables. Returns true if either both tables are nil, or neither is nil and the content and the order of both are equal.
Example:
let a = {'a': 5, 'b': 9, 'c': 13}.newOrderedTable b = {'b': 9, 'c': 13, 'a': 5}.newOrderedTable doAssert a != b
Source Edit proc initCountTable[A](initialSize = 64): CountTable[A]
-
Creates a new count table that is empty.
Starting from Nim v0.20, tables are initialized by default and it is not necessary to call this function explicitly.
See also:
- toCountTable proc
- newCountTable proc for creating a CountTableRef
proc toCountTable[A](keys: openArray[A]): CountTable[A]
- Creates a new count table with every member of a container keys having a count of how many times it occurs in that container. Source Edit
proc `[]`[A](t: CountTable[A]; key: A): int
-
Retrieves the value at t[key] if key is in t. Otherwise 0 is returned.
See also:
- getOrDefault to return a custom value if the key doesn't exist
- mget proc
- []= proc for inserting a new (key, value) pair in the table
- hasKey proc for checking if a key is in the table
proc `[]=`[A](t: var CountTable[A]; key: A; val: int)
-
Inserts a (key, value) pair into t.
See also:
Source Edit proc inc[A](t: var CountTable[A]; key: A; val: Positive = 1)
-
Increments t[key] by val (default: 1).
val must be a positive number. If you need to decrement a value, use a regular Table instead.
Example:
var a = toCountTable("aab") a.inc('a') a.inc('b', 10) doAssert a == toCountTable("aaabbbbbbbbbbb")
Source Edit proc smallest[A](t: CountTable[A]): tuple[key: A, val: int]
-
Returns the (key, value) pair with the smallest val. Efficiency: O(n)
See also:
Source Edit proc largest[A](t: CountTable[A]): tuple[key: A, val: int]
-
Returns the (key, value) pair with the largest val. Efficiency: O(n)
See also:
Source Edit proc hasKey[A](t: CountTable[A]; key: A): bool
-
Returns true if key is in the table t.
See also:
- contains proc for use with the in operator
- [] proc for retrieving a value of a key
- getOrDefault proc to return a custom value if the key doesn't exist
proc contains[A](t: CountTable[A]; key: A): bool
- Alias of hasKey proc for use with the in operator. Source Edit
proc getOrDefault[A](t: CountTable[A]; key: A; default: int = 0): int
-
Retrieves the value at t[key] ifkey is in t. Otherwise, the integer value of default is returned.
See also:
- [] proc for retrieving a value of a key
- hasKey proc for checking if a key is in the table
proc len[A](t: CountTable[A]): int
- Returns the number of keys in t. Source Edit
proc del[A](t: var CountTable[A]; key: A)
-
Deletes key from table t. Does nothing if the key does not exist.
O(n) complexity.
See also:
- pop proc
- clear proc to empty the whole table
Example:
var a = toCountTable("aabbbccccc") a.del('b') assert a == toCountTable("aaccccc") a.del('b') assert a == toCountTable("aaccccc") a.del('c') assert a == toCountTable("aa")
Source Edit proc pop[A](t: var CountTable[A]; key: A; val: var int): bool
-
Deletes the key from the table. Returns true, if the key existed, and sets val to the mapping of the key. Otherwise, returns false, and the val is unchanged.
O(n) complexity.
See also:
- del proc
- clear proc to empty the whole table
Example:
var a = toCountTable("aabbbccccc") var i = 0 assert a.pop('b', i) assert i == 3 i = 99 assert not a.pop('b', i) assert i == 99
Source Edit proc clear[A](t: var CountTable[A])
-
Resets the table so that it is empty.
See also:
Source Edit proc merge[A](s: var CountTable[A]; t: CountTable[A])
-
Merges the second table into the first one (must be declared as var).
Example:
var a = toCountTable("aaabbc") let b = toCountTable("bcc") a.merge(b) doAssert a == toCountTable("aaabbbccc")
Source Edit proc `$`[A](t: CountTable[A]): string
- The $ operator for count tables. Used internally when calling echo on a table. Source Edit
proc `==`[A](s, t: CountTable[A]): bool
- The == operator for count tables. Returns true if both tables contain the same keys with the same count. Insert order does not matter. Source Edit
proc newCountTable[A](initialSize = 64): CountTableRef[A]
-
Creates a new ref count table that is empty.
See also:
- newCountTable proc for creating a CountTableRef from a collection
- initCountTable proc for creating a CountTable
proc newCountTable[A](keys: openArray[A]): CountTableRef[A]
- Creates a new ref count table with every member of a container keys having a count of how many times it occurs in that container. Source Edit
proc `[]`[A](t: CountTableRef[A]; key: A): int
-
Retrieves the value at t[key] if key is in t. Otherwise 0 is returned.
See also:
- getOrDefault to return a custom value if the key doesn't exist
- mget proc
- []= proc for inserting a new (key, value) pair in the table
- hasKey proc for checking if a key is in the table
proc `[]=`[A](t: CountTableRef[A]; key: A; val: int)
-
Inserts a (key, value) pair into t.
See also:
Source Edit proc inc[A](t: CountTableRef[A]; key: A; val = 1)
-
Increments t[key] by val (default: 1).
Example:
var a = newCountTable("aab") a.inc('a') a.inc('b', 10) doAssert a == newCountTable("aaabbbbbbbbbbb")
Source Edit proc smallest[A](t: CountTableRef[A]): (A, int)
-
Returns the (key, value) pair with the smallest val. Efficiency: O(n)
See also:
Source Edit proc largest[A](t: CountTableRef[A]): (A, int)
-
Returns the (key, value) pair with the largest val. Efficiency: O(n)
See also:
Source Edit proc hasKey[A](t: CountTableRef[A]; key: A): bool
-
Returns true if key is in the table t.
See also:
- contains proc for use with the in operator
- [] proc for retrieving a value of a key
- getOrDefault proc to return a custom value if the key doesn't exist
proc contains[A](t: CountTableRef[A]; key: A): bool
- Alias of hasKey proc for use with the in operator. Source Edit
proc getOrDefault[A](t: CountTableRef[A]; key: A; default: int): int
-
Retrieves the value at t[key] ifkey is in t. Otherwise, the integer value of default is returned.
See also:
- [] proc for retrieving a value of a key
- hasKey proc for checking if a key is in the table
proc len[A](t: CountTableRef[A]): int
- Returns the number of keys in t. Source Edit
proc del[A](t: CountTableRef[A]; key: A)
-
Deletes key from table t. Does nothing if the key does not exist.
O(n) complexity.
See also:
- pop proc
- clear proc to empty the whole table
proc pop[A](t: CountTableRef[A]; key: A; val: var int): bool
-
Deletes the key from the table. Returns true, if the key existed, and sets val to the mapping of the key. Otherwise, returns false, and the val is unchanged.
O(n) complexity.
See also:
- del proc
- clear proc to empty the whole table
proc clear[A](t: CountTableRef[A])
-
Resets the table so that it is empty.
See also:
Source Edit proc merge[A](s, t: CountTableRef[A])
-
Merges the second table into the first one.
Example:
let a = newCountTable("aaabbc") b = newCountTable("bcc") a.merge(b) doAssert a == newCountTable("aaabbbccc")
Source Edit proc `$`[A](t: CountTableRef[A]): string
- The $ operator for count tables. Used internally when calling echo on a table. Source Edit
proc `==`[A](s, t: CountTableRef[A]): bool
- The == operator for count tables. Returns true if either both tables are nil, or neither is nil and both contain the same keys with the same count. Insert order does not matter. Source Edit
Iterators
iterator keys[A, B](t: Table[A, B]): A
-
Iterates over all the keys in the table t.
See also:
Example:
var a = { 'o': @[1, 5, 7, 9], 'e': @[2, 4, 6, 8] }.toTable for k in a.keys: a[k].add(99) doAssert a == {'e': @[2, 4, 6, 8, 99], 'o': @[1, 5, 7, 9, 99]}.toTable
Source Edit iterator keysFrom[A, B](b: Table[A, B]; fromKey: A): A
- Iterates over keys in the table from fromKey to the end. Source Edit
iterator keysBetween[A, B](b: Table[A, B]; fromKey: A; toKey: A): A
- Iterates over keys in the table from fromKey to toKey inclusive. Source Edit
iterator values[A, B](t: Table[A, B]): B
-
Iterates over all the values in the table t.
See also:
Example:
let a = { 'o': @[1, 5, 7, 9], 'e': @[2, 4, 6, 8] }.toTable for v in a.values: doAssert v.len == 4
Source Edit iterator mvalues[A, B](t: var Table[A, B]): var B
-
Iterates over all the values in the table t. The values can be modified.
See also:
Example:
var a = { 'o': @[1, 5, 7, 9], 'e': @[2, 4, 6, 8] }.toTable for v in a.mvalues: v.add(99) doAssert a == {'e': @[2, 4, 6, 8, 99], 'o': @[1, 5, 7, 9, 99]}.toTable
Source Edit iterator valuesFrom[A, B](b: Table[A, B]; fromKey: A): B
- Iterates over the values in the table from the given key to the end. Source Edit
iterator valuesBetween[A, B](b: Table[A, B]; fromKey: A; toKey: A): B
- Iterates over the values in the table from fromKey to toKey inclusive. Source Edit
iterator pairs[A, B](t: Table[A, B]): (A, B)
-
Iterates over all (key, value) pairs in the table t.
See also:
Examples:
let a = { 'o': [1, 5, 7, 9], 'e': [2, 4, 6, 8] }.toTable for k, v in a.pairs: echo "key: ", k echo "value: ", v # key: e # value: [2, 4, 6, 8] # key: o # value: [1, 5, 7, 9]
Source Edit iterator mpairs[A, B](t: var Table[A, B]): (A, var B)
-
Iterates over all (key, value) pairs in the table t. The values can be modified.
See also:
Example:
var a = { 'o': @[1, 5, 7, 9], 'e': @[2, 4, 6, 8] }.toTable for k, v in a.mpairs: v.add(v[0] + 10) doAssert a == {'e': @[2, 4, 6, 8, 12], 'o': @[1, 5, 7, 9, 11]}.toTable
Source Edit iterator pairsFrom[A, B](b: Table[A, B]; fromKey: A): tuple[key: A, val: B]
- Iterates over (key, value) pairs in the table from the given key to the end. Source Edit
iterator pairsBetween[A, B](b: Table[A, B]; fromKey: A; toKey: A): tuple[key: A, val: B]
- Iterates over (key, value) pairs in the table from fromKey to toKey inclusive. Source Edit
iterator keys[A, B](t: TableRef[A, B]): A
-
Iterates over any key in the table t.
See also:
Example:
let a = { 'o': @[1, 5, 7, 9], 'e': @[2, 4, 6, 8] }.newTable for k in a.keys: a[k].add(99) doAssert a == {'e': @[2, 4, 6, 8, 99], 'o': @[1, 5, 7, 9, 99]}.newTable
Source Edit iterator values[A, B](t: TableRef[A, B]): B
-
Iterates over any value in the table t.
See also:
Example:
let a = { 'o': @[1, 5, 7, 9], 'e': @[2, 4, 6, 8] }.newTable for v in a.values: doAssert v.len == 4
Source Edit iterator mvalues[A, B](t: TableRef[A, B]): var B
-
Iterates over any value in the table t. The values can be modified.
See also:
Example:
let a = { 'o': @[1, 5, 7, 9], 'e': @[2, 4, 6, 8] }.newTable for v in a.mvalues: v.add(99) doAssert a == {'e': @[2, 4, 6, 8, 99], 'o': @[1, 5, 7, 9, 99]}.newTable
Source Edit iterator pairs[A, B](t: TableRef[A, B]): (A, B)
-
Iterates over any (key, value) pair in the table t.
See also:
Examples:
let a = { 'o': [1, 5, 7, 9], 'e': [2, 4, 6, 8] }.newTable for k, v in a.pairs: echo "key: ", k echo "value: ", v # key: e # value: [2, 4, 6, 8] # key: o # value: [1, 5, 7, 9]
Source Edit iterator mpairs[A, B](t: TableRef[A, B]): (A, var B)
-
Iterates over any (key, value) pair in the table t. The values can be modified.
See also:
Example:
let a = { 'o': @[1, 5, 7, 9], 'e': @[2, 4, 6, 8] }.newTable for k, v in a.mpairs: v.add(v[0] + 10) doAssert a == {'e': @[2, 4, 6, 8, 12], 'o': @[1, 5, 7, 9, 11]}.newTable
Source Edit iterator pairs[A, B](t: OrderedTable[A, B]): (A, B)
-
Iterates over any (key, value) pair in the table t in insertion order.
See also:
Examples:
let a = { 'o': [1, 5, 7, 9], 'e': [2, 4, 6, 8] }.toOrderedTable for k, v in a.pairs: echo "key: ", k echo "value: ", v # key: o # value: [1, 5, 7, 9] # key: e # value: [2, 4, 6, 8]
Source Edit iterator mpairs[A, B](t: var OrderedTable[A, B]): (A, var B)
-
Iterates over any (key, value) pair in the table t (must be declared as var) in insertion order. The values can be modified.
See also:
Example:
var a = { 'o': @[1, 5, 7, 9], 'e': @[2, 4, 6, 8] }.toOrderedTable for k, v in a.mpairs: v.add(v[0] + 10) doAssert a == {'o': @[1, 5, 7, 9, 11], 'e': @[2, 4, 6, 8, 12]}.toOrderedTable
Source Edit iterator keys[A, B](t: OrderedTable[A, B]): A
-
Iterates over any key in the table t in insertion order.
See also:
Example:
var a = { 'o': @[1, 5, 7, 9], 'e': @[2, 4, 6, 8] }.toOrderedTable for k in a.keys: a[k].add(99) doAssert a == {'o': @[1, 5, 7, 9, 99], 'e': @[2, 4, 6, 8, 99]}.toOrderedTable
Source Edit iterator values[A, B](t: OrderedTable[A, B]): B
-
Iterates over any value in the table t in insertion order.
See also:
Example:
let a = { 'o': @[1, 5, 7, 9], 'e': @[2, 4, 6, 8] }.toOrderedTable for v in a.values: doAssert v.len == 4
Source Edit iterator mvalues[A, B](t: var OrderedTable[A, B]): var B
-
Iterates over any value in the table t (must be declared as var) in insertion order. The values can be modified.
See also:
Example:
var a = { 'o': @[1, 5, 7, 9], 'e': @[2, 4, 6, 8] }.toOrderedTable for v in a.mvalues: v.add(99) doAssert a == {'o': @[1, 5, 7, 9, 99], 'e': @[2, 4, 6, 8, 99]}.toOrderedTable
Source Edit iterator keys[A, B](t: OrderedTableRef[A, B]): A
-
Iterates over any key in the table t in insertion order.
See also:
Example:
let a = { 'o': @[1, 5, 7, 9], 'e': @[2, 4, 6, 8] }.newOrderedTable for k in a.keys: a[k].add(99) doAssert a == {'o': @[1, 5, 7, 9, 99], 'e': @[2, 4, 6, 8, 99]}.newOrderedTable
Source Edit iterator values[A, B](t: OrderedTableRef[A, B]): B
-
Iterates over any value in the table t in insertion order.
See also:
Example:
let a = { 'o': @[1, 5, 7, 9], 'e': @[2, 4, 6, 8] }.newOrderedTable for v in a.values: doAssert v.len == 4
Source Edit iterator mvalues[A, B](t: OrderedTableRef[A, B]): var B
-
Iterates over any value in the table t in insertion order. The values can be modified.
See also:
Example:
let a = { 'o': @[1, 5, 7, 9], 'e': @[2, 4, 6, 8] }.newOrderedTable for v in a.mvalues: v.add(99) doAssert a == {'o': @[1, 5, 7, 9, 99], 'e': @[2, 4, 6, 8, 99]}.newOrderedTable
Source Edit iterator pairs[A, B](t: OrderedTableRef[A, B]): (A, B)
-
Iterates over any (key, value) pair in the table t in insertion order.
See also:
Examples:
let a = { 'o': [1, 5, 7, 9], 'e': [2, 4, 6, 8] }.newOrderedTable for k, v in a.pairs: echo "key: ", k echo "value: ", v # key: o # value: [1, 5, 7, 9] # key: e # value: [2, 4, 6, 8]
Source Edit iterator mpairs[A, B](t: OrderedTableRef[A, B]): (A, var B)
-
Iterates over any (key, value) pair in the table t in insertion order. The values can be modified.
See also:
Example:
let a = { 'o': @[1, 5, 7, 9], 'e': @[2, 4, 6, 8] }.newOrderedTable for k, v in a.mpairs: v.add(v[0] + 10) doAssert a == {'o': @[1, 5, 7, 9, 11], 'e': @[2, 4, 6, 8, 12]}.newOrderedTable
Source Edit iterator pairs[A](t: CountTable[A]): (A, int)
-
Iterates over any (key, value) pair in the table t.
See also:
Examples:
let a = toCountTable("abracadabra") for k, v in pairs(a): echo "key: ", k echo "value: ", v # key: a # value: 5 # key: b # value: 2 # key: c # value: 1 # key: d # value: 1 # key: r # value: 2
Source Edit iterator mpairs[A](t: var CountTable[A]): (A, var int)
-
Iterates over any (key, value) pair in the table t (must be declared as var). The values can be modified.
See also:
Example:
var a = toCountTable("abracadabra") for k, v in mpairs(a): v = 2 doAssert a == toCountTable("aabbccddrr")
Source Edit iterator keys[A](t: CountTable[A]): A
-
Iterates over any key in the table t.
See also:
Example:
var a = toCountTable("abracadabra") for k in keys(a): a[k] = 2 doAssert a == toCountTable("aabbccddrr")
Source Edit iterator values[A](t: CountTable[A]): int
-
Iterates over any value in the table t.
See also:
Example:
let a = toCountTable("abracadabra") for v in values(a): assert v < 10
Source Edit iterator mvalues[A](t: var CountTable[A]): var int
-
Iterates over any value in the table t (must be declared as var). The values can be modified.
See also:
Example:
var a = toCountTable("abracadabra") for v in mvalues(a): v = 2 doAssert a == toCountTable("aabbccddrr")
Source Edit iterator keys[A](t: CountTableRef[A]): A
-
Iterates over any key in the table t.
See also:
Example:
let a = newCountTable("abracadabra") for k in keys(a): a[k] = 2 doAssert a == newCountTable("aabbccddrr")
Source Edit iterator values[A](t: CountTableRef[A]): int
-
Iterates over any value in the table t.
See also:
Example:
let a = newCountTable("abracadabra") for v in values(a): assert v < 10
Source Edit iterator mvalues[A](t: CountTableRef[A]): var int
-
Iterates over any value in the table t. The values can be modified.
See also:
Example:
var a = newCountTable("abracadabra") for v in mvalues(a): v = 2 doAssert a == newCountTable("aabbccddrr")
Source Edit iterator pairs[A](t: CountTableRef[A]): (A, int)
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Iterates over any (key, value) pair in the table t.
See also:
Examples:
let a = newCountTable("abracadabra") for k, v in pairs(a): echo "key: ", k echo "value: ", v # key: a # value: 5 # key: b # value: 2 # key: c # value: 1 # key: d # value: 1 # key: r # value: 2
Source Edit iterator mpairs[A](t: CountTableRef[A]): (A, var int)
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Iterates over any (key, value) pair in the table t. The values can be modified.
See also:
Example:
let a = newCountTable("abracadabra") for k, v in mpairs(a): v = 2 doAssert a == newCountTable("aabbccddrr")
Source Edit