groovy: safely find a key in a map and return its value

不想你离开。 提交于 2019-12-03 00:56:51
Doris Gammenthaler
def mymap = [name:"Gromit", id:1234]
def x = mymap.find{ it.key == "likes" }?.value
if(x)
    println "x value: ${x}"

println x.getClass().name

?. checks for null and does not create an exception in Groovy. If the key does not exist, the result will be a org.codehaus.groovy.runtime.NullObject.

The whole point of using Maps is direct access. If you know for sure that the value in a map will never be Groovy-false, then you can do this:

def mymap = [name:"Gromit", likes:"cheese", id:1234]
def key = "likes"

if(mymap[key]) {
    println mymap[key]
}

However, if the value could potentially be Groovy-false, you should use:

if(mymap.containsKey(key)) {
    println mymap[key]
}

The easiest solution, though, if you know the value isn't going to be Groovy-false (or you can ignore that), and want a default value, is like this:

def value = mymap[key] ?: "default"

All three of these solutions are significantly faster than your examples, because they don't scan the entire map for keys. They take advantage of the HashMap (or LinkedHashMap) design that makes direct key access nearly instantaneous.

In general, this depends what your map contains. If it has null values, things can get tricky and containsKey(key) or get(key, default) should be used to detect of the element really exists. In many cases the code can become simpler you can define a default value:

def mymap = [name:"Gromit", likes:"cheese", id:1234]
def x1 = mymap.get('likes', '[nothing specified]')
println "x value: ${x}" }

Note also that containsKey() or get() are much faster than setting up a closure to check the element mymap.find{ it.key == "likes" }. Using closure only makes sense if you really do something more complex in there. You could e.g. do this:

mymap.find{ // "it" is the default parameter
  if (it.key != "likes") return false
  println "x value: ${it.value}" 
  return true // stop searching
}

Or with explicit parameters:

mymap.find{ key,value ->
  (key != "likes")  return false
  println "x value: ${value}" 
  return true // stop searching
}
Doris Gammenthaler

The reason you get a Null Pointer Exception is because there is no key likesZZZ in your second example. Try:

def mymap = [name:"Gromit", likes:"cheese", id:1234]
def x = mymap.find{ it.key == "likes" }.value
if(x)
    println "x value: ${x}"

Groovy maps can be used with the property property, so you can just do:

def x = mymap.likes

If the key you are looking for ('likes.key') contains a dot itself, then you can use the syntax:

def x = mymap.'likes.key'
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