Sukarelawan kami masih belum menterjemah artikel ini ke Melayu lagi. Sertai kami dan bantu melaksanakannya!
This chapter introduces collections of data which are ordered by a key; Map and Set objects contain elements which are iterable in the order of insertion.
Maps
Map
object
ECMAScript 6 introduces a new data structure to map values to values. A Map
object is a simple key/value map and can iterate its elements in insertion order.
The following code shows some basic operations with a Map
. See also the Map
reference page for more examples and the complete API. You can use a for...of
loop to return an array of [key, value]
for each iteration.
var sayings = new Map(); sayings.set("dog", "woof"); sayings.set("cat", "meow"); sayings.set("elephant", "toot"); sayings.size; // 3 sayings.get("fox"); // undefined sayings.has("bird"); // false sayings.delete("dog"); sayings.has("dog"); // false for (var [key, value] of sayings) { console.log(key + " goes " + value); } // "cat goes meow" // "elephant goes toot" sayings.clear(); sayings.size; // 0
Object
and Map
compared
Traditionally, objects have been used to map strings to values. Objects allow you to set keys to values, retrieve those values, delete keys, and detect whether something is stored at a key. Map
objects, however, have a few more advantages that make them better maps.
- The keys of an
Object
areStrings
, where they can be of any value for aMap
. - You can get the size of a
Map
easily while you have to manually keep track of size for anObject
. - The iteration of maps is in insertion order of the elements.
- An
Object
has a prototype, so there are default keys in the map. (this can be bypassed usingmap = Object.create(null)
).
These three tips can help you to decide whether to use a Map
or an Object
:
- Use maps over objects when keys are unknown until run time, and when all keys are the same type and all values are the same type.
- Use maps in case if there is a need to store primitive values as keys because object treats each key as a string whether it's a number value, boolean value or any other primitive value.
- Use objects when there is logic that operates on individual elements.
WeakMap
object
The WeakMap
object is a collection of key/value pairs in which the keys are objects only and the values can be arbitrary values. The object references in the keys are held weakly meaning that they are target of garbage collection (GC) if there is no other reference to the object anymore. The WeakMap
API is the same as the Map
API.
One difference to Map
objects is that WeakMap
keys are not enumerable (i.e. there is no method giving you a list of the keys). If they were, the list would depend on the state of garbage collection, introducing non-determinism.
For more information and example code, see also "Why WeakMap?" on the WeakMap
reference page.
One use case of WeakMap
objects is to store private data for an object or to hide implementation details. The following example is from Nick Fitzgerald blog post "Hiding Implementation Details with ECMAScript 6 WeakMaps". The private data and methods belong inside the object and are stored in the privates
WeakMap object. Everything exposed on the instance and prototype is public; everything else is inaccessible from the outside world because privates
is not exported from the module
const privates = new WeakMap(); function Public() { const me = { // Private data goes here }; privates.set(this, me); } Public.prototype.method = function () { const me = privates.get(this); // Do stuff with private data in `me`... }; module.exports = Public;
Sets
Set
object
Set
objects are collections of values. You can iterate its elements in insertion order. A value in a Set
may only occur once; it is unique in the Set
's collection.
The following code shows some basic operations with a Set
. See also the Set
reference page for more examples and the complete API.
var mySet = new Set(); mySet.add(1); mySet.add("some text"); mySet.add("foo"); mySet.has(1); // true mySet.delete("foo"); mySet.size; // 2 for (let item of mySet) console.log(item); // 1 // "some text"
Converting between Array and Set
You can create an Array
from a Set using Array.from
or the spread operator. Also, the Set
constructor accepts an Array
to convert in the other direction. Note again that Set
objects store unique values, so any duplicate elements from an Array are deleted when converting.
Array.from(mySet); [...mySet2]; mySet2 = new Set([1,2,3,4]);
Array
and Set
compared
Traditionally, a set of elements has been stored in arrays in JavaScript in a lot of situations. The new Set
object, however, has some advantages:
- Checking whether an element exists in an collection using
indexOf
for arrays is slow. Set
objects let you delete elements by their value. With an array you would have to splice based on a element's index.- The value
NaN
cannot be found withindexOf
in array. Set
objects store unique values, you don't have to keep track of duplicates by yourself.
WeakSet
object
WeakSet
objects are collections of objects. An object in the WeakSet
may only occur once; it is unique in the WeakSet
's collection and objects are not enumerable.
The main differences to the Set
object are:
- In contrast to
Sets
,WeakSets
are collections of objects only and not of arbitrary values of any type. - The
WeakSet
is weak: References to objects in the collection are held weakly. If there is no other reference to an object stored in theWeakSet
, they can be garbage collected. That also means that there is no list of current objects stored in the collection.WeakSets
are not enumerable.
The use cases of WeakSet
objects are limited. They will not leak memory so it can be safe to use DOM elements as a key and mark them for tracking purposes, for example.
Key and value equality of Map
and Set
Both, the key equality of Map
objects and the value equality of Set
objects, are based on the "same-value-zero algorithm":
- Equality works like the identity comparison operator
===
. -0
and+0
are considered equal.NaN
is considered equal to itself (contrary to===
).