In this example,we will learn how to avoid duplicate user defined objects as a key from LinkedHashMap.
Source Code
1)ForExample
package com.beginner.examples;
import java.util.LinkedHashMap;
import java.util.Set;
public class ForExample{
private String name;
private int number;
public ForExample(String nm, int num){
this.name = nm;
this.number = num;
}
public String getName() {
return name;
}
public void setName(String name) {
this.name = name;
}
public int getNumber() {
return number;
}
public void setNumber(int number) {
this.number = number;
}
public String toString(){
return "name: " + name + " number: " + number;
}
// implement equals() method at the user defined objects
public boolean equals(Object obj){
ForExample e = (ForExample) obj;
return (e.name.equals(this.name) && e.number == this.number);
}
// implement hashcode() method at the user defined objects
public int hashCode(){
int hashcode = 0;
hashcode = number*10;
hashcode += name.hashCode();
return hashcode;
}
}
2)DuplicateKeyExample2
package com.beginner.examples;
import java.util.LinkedHashMap;
import java.util.Set;
public class DuplicateKeyExample {
public static void main(String a[]){
LinkedHashMap map = new LinkedHashMap();
map.put(new ForExample("java", 110), "java");
map.put(new ForExample("c++", 20), "c++");
map.put(new ForExample("python", 75), "python");
// print the map
printMap(map);
ForExample key = new ForExample("java", 110);
map.put(key, "c");
System.out.println("After adding dulicate key:");
// print the map
printMap(map);
}
public static void printMap(LinkedHashMap map){
Set keys = map.keySet();
for(ForExample p:keys){
System.out.println(p + " -> " + map.get(p));
}
}
}
Output:
name: java number: 110 -> java
name: c++ number: 20 -> c++
name: python number: 75 -> python
After adding dulicate key:
name: java number: 110 -> c
name: c++ number: 20 -> c++
name: python number: 75 -> python
References
Imported packages in Java documentation: