Search code examples
c++c++11hashdictionaryunordered-map

Choosing between std::map and std::unordered_map


Now that std has a real hash map in unordered_map, why (or when) would I still want to use the good old map over unordered_map on systems where it actually exists? Are there any obvious situations that I cannot immediately see?


Solution

  • As already mentioned, map allows to iterate over the elements in a sorted way, but unordered_map does not. This is very important in many situations, for example displaying a collection (e.g. address book). This also manifests in other indirect ways like: (1) Start iterating from the iterator returned by find(), or (2) existence of member functions like lower_bound().

    Also, I think there is some difference in the worst case search complexity.

    • For map, it is O( lg N )

    • For unordered_map, it is O( N ) [This may happen when the hash function is not good leading to too many hash collisions.]

    The same is applicable for worst case deletion complexity.