This proposal defines an interface to hash tables, which are widely recognized as a fundamental data structure for a wide variety of applications. A hash table is a data structure that:
Incorporating this proposal as a standard feature in WG1 Scheme implementations makes it possible to write efficient and portable programs that use hash tables. (After reading a paper about SNOBOL and realizing that it had hash tables as a standard feature in 1969, six years before Scheme was born, and that every other modern language now has them, I decided it was intolerable for even WG1 Scheme not to have them.)
I have added equivalences to SRFI 69 and R6RS facilities. Systems supporting either should be able to support these hash tables trivially; it will be necessary to write hash-table-fold for R6RS systems. I have adopted SRFI 69's term hash-table rather than R6RS's hashtable because of our decision in #40. Besides, the word hashtable obviously means something that can be ... hashted.
The main annoyances of this proposal for SRFI 69 programmers will be remembering to supply a third argument to hash-table-ref, and for R6RS programmers will be remembering to insert a hyphen in hashtable. Both will have to get used to the new constructors.
These constructors provide suitable hash functions for the equivalence function specified as part of the constructor name. This proposal does not allow (semi-)arbitrary equivalence and hash functions to be specified.
(make-eq-hash-table)
Creates a new table with no associations whose equivalence function is eq?. (SRFI-69 (make-hash-table eq? hash-by-identity); R6RS (make-eq-hashtable))
(make-equal-hash-table)
Creates a new table with no associations whose equivalence function is equal?. (SRFI-69 (make-hash-table equal? hash); R6RS (make-hashtable equal? equal-hash))
(make-string-hash-table)
Creates a new table with no associations whose equivalence function is string=?. (SRFI-69 (make-hash-table string=? string-hash); R6RS (make-hashtable string=? string-hash))
(make-string-ci-hash-table)
Creates a new table with no associations whose equivalence function is string-ci=?. (SRFI-69 (make-hash-table string-ci=? string-ci-hash); R6RS (make-hashtable string-ci=? string-ci-hash))
Note that there are no hash tables whose equivalence function is eqv?, because SRFI 69 does not support them. Users will have to live with eq? or equal? hash tables as the case may be.
(hash-table-copy hash-table)
Creates a new hash table with the same equivalence predicate and associations as hash-table. (SRFI-69 hash-table-copy; R6RS (hashtable-copy hash-table #t))
(hash-table? obj)
Returns #t if obj is a hash table. (SRFI-69 hash-table?; R6RS hashtable?)
(hash-table-contains? hash-table key)
Returns #t if there is any association to key in hash-table. Must execute in amortized O(1) time. (SRFI-69 hash-table-exists?; R6RS hashtable-contains?)
(hash-table-ref hash-table key default)
Returns the value associated to key in table. If no value is associated to key, default is returned. Must execute in amortized O(1) time. (SRFI-69 hash-table-ref/default; R6RS hashtable-ref)
(hash-table-size table)
Returns the number of associations in hash-table. Must execute in amortized O(1) time. (SRFI-69 hash-table-size; R6RS hashtable-size)
(hash-table-set! hash-table key value)
Creates a new association in hash-table that associates key with value. The previous association (if any) is removed. It is an error if table is a string or string-ci hash table and key is not a string. Must execute in amortized O(1) time. (SRFI-69 hash-table-set!; R6RS hashtable-set!)
(hash-table-delete! hash-table key)
Removes any association to key in hash-table. It is not an error if no association for that key exists. Must execute in amortized O(1) time. (SRFI-69 hash-table-delete!; R6RS hashtable-delete!)
(hash-table-update! hash-table key procedure default ])
Semantically equivalent to, but may be implemented more efficiently than, the following code:
(hash-table-set! hash-table key (procedure (hash-table-ref hash-table key default)))
Must execute in amortized O(1) time. (SRFI-69 hash-table-update!/default; R6RS hashtable-update!)
(hash-table-fold hash-table procedure init)
Calls procedure for every association in hash-table with three arguments: the key of the association, the value of the association, and an accumulated value val. Val is init for the first invocation of procedure, and for subsequent invocations of procedure, the return value of the previous invocation. The value returned by hash-table-fold is the return value of the last invocation of f. The order in which procedure is called for different associations is unspecified. (SRFI-69 `hash-table-fold; not in R6RS but easily implemented: see below.)
The following features are not part of this proposal for various reasons.
Hash-table-keys is present in both SRFI 69 and R6RS, but returns a list of keys in the first, a vector of keys in the second.
Hash-table-values returns a list of values in SRFI 69; hashtable-entries returns two values, a vector of keys and a vector of values in R6RS.
Hash-table-hash-function always returns the hash function of a hash table in SRFI 69, but returns #f in the case of eq? (and eqv?) hash tables in R6RS.
Hashtable-clear!, which removes all associations from a hash table.
Specifying the initial capacity of a hash table.
Immutable hash tables.
Hash tables based on eqv?.
Hash-table-walk, which is the analogue of for-each for hash tables.
Conversion from a-lists to hash tables and back.
Hash-table-merge, which destructively adds all associations in a source hash table to a destination hash table.
Default values specified in the form of a thunk to call.