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NAME

       Hashtbl - Hash tables and hash functions.

Module

       Module   Hashtbl

Documentation

       Module Hashtbl
        : sig end

       Hash tables and hash functions.

       Hash tables are hashed association tables, with in-place modification.  Because most operations on a hash
       table  modify  their  input,  they're  more  commonly  used  in  imperative code. The lookup of the value
       associated with a key (see Hashtbl.find , Hashtbl.find_opt ) is normally very fast, often faster than the
       equivalent lookup in Map .

       The functors Hashtbl.Make and Hashtbl.MakeSeeded can be used when performance  or  flexibility  are  key.
       The  user  provides  custom equality and hash functions for the key type, and obtains a custom hash table
       type for this particular type of key.

       Warning a hash table is only as good as the hash function. A bad hash function will turn the table into a
       degenerate association list, with linear time lookup instead of constant time lookup.

       The polymorphic Hashtbl.t hash table is useful in simpler cases or in interactive environments.  It  uses
       the  polymorphic  Hashtbl.hash  function  defined  in  the  OCaml  runtime  (at the time of writing, it's
       SipHash), as well as the polymorphic equality (=) .

       See Hashtbl.examples .

       Alert unsynchronized_access.  Unsynchronized accesses to hash tables are a programming error.

       Unsynchronized accesses

       Unsynchronized accesses to a hash table may lead  to  an  invalid  hash  table  state.  Thus,  concurrent
       accesses to a hash tables must be synchronized (for instance with a Mutex.t ).

   Generic interface
       type (!'a, !'b) t

       The type of hash tables from type 'a to type 'b .

       val create : ?random:bool -> int -> ('a, 'b) t

       Hashtbl.create  n  creates  a  new, empty hash table, with initial size greater or equal to the suggested
       size n .  For best results, n should be on the order of the expected number of elements that will  be  in
       the  table.   The  table  grows as needed, so n is just an initial guess.  If n is very small or negative
       then it is disregarded and a small default size is used.

       The optional ~random parameter (a boolean) controls whether the internal organization of the  hash  table
       is randomized at each execution of Hashtbl.create or deterministic over all executions.

       A  hash  table  that  is created with ~random set to false uses a fixed hash function ( Hashtbl.hash ) to
       distribute keys among buckets.  As a consequence, collisions between keys happen  deterministically.   In
       Web-facing  applications  or  other security-sensitive applications, the deterministic collision patterns
       can be exploited by a malicious user to create a  denial-of-service  attack:  the  attacker  sends  input
       crafted to create many collisions in the table, slowing the application down.

       A  hash  table that is created with ~random set to true uses the seeded hash function Hashtbl.seeded_hash
       with a seed that is randomly chosen at hash table creation time.  In effect, the hash  function  used  is
       randomly  selected  among  2^{30}  different  hash  functions.   All  these hash functions have different
       collision patterns, rendering ineffective the denial-of-service attack described above.  However, because
       of randomization, enumerating all elements of the hash table using Hashtbl.fold  or  Hashtbl.iter  is  no
       longer deterministic: elements are enumerated in different orders at different runs of the program.

       If  no  ~random  parameter is given, hash tables are created in non-random mode by default.  This default
       can be changed either programmatically by calling Hashtbl.randomize or by  setting  the  R  flag  in  the
       OCAMLRUNPARAM environment variable.

       Before4.00 the ~random parameter was not present and all hash tables were created in non-randomized mode.

       val clear : ('a, 'b) t -> unit

       Empty  a  hash  table.  Use  reset instead of clear to shrink the size of the bucket table to its initial
       size.

       val reset : ('a, 'b) t -> unit

       Empty a hash table and shrink the size of the bucket table to its initial size.

       Since 4.00

       val copy : ('a, 'b) t -> ('a, 'b) t

       Return a copy of the given hashtable.

       val add : ('a, 'b) t -> 'a -> 'b -> unit

       Hashtbl.add tbl key data adds a binding of key to data in table tbl .

       Warning: Previous bindings for key are  not  removed,  but  simply  hidden.  That  is,  after  performing
       Hashtbl.remove  tbl  key  ,  the  previous binding for key , if any, is restored.  (Same behavior as with
       association lists.)

       If you desire the classic behavior of replacing elements, see Hashtbl.replace .

       val find : ('a, 'b) t -> 'a -> 'b

       Hashtbl.find tbl x returns the current binding of x in tbl , or  raises  Not_found  if  no  such  binding
       exists.

       val find_opt : ('a, 'b) t -> 'a -> 'b option

       Hashtbl.find_opt tbl x returns the current binding of x in tbl , or None if no such binding exists.

       Since 4.05

       val find_all : ('a, 'b) t -> 'a -> 'b list

       Hashtbl.find_all  tbl  x  returns the list of all data associated with x in tbl .  The current binding is
       returned first, then the previous bindings, in reverse order of introduction in the table.

       val mem : ('a, 'b) t -> 'a -> bool

       Hashtbl.mem tbl x checks if x is bound in tbl .

       val remove : ('a, 'b) t -> 'a -> unit

       Hashtbl.remove tbl x removes the current binding of x in tbl ,  restoring  the  previous  binding  if  it
       exists.  It does nothing if x is not bound in tbl .

       val replace : ('a, 'b) t -> 'a -> 'b -> unit

       Hashtbl.replace tbl key data replaces the current binding of key in tbl by a binding of key to data .  If
       key  is  unbound  in tbl , a binding of key to data is added to tbl .  This is functionally equivalent to
       Hashtbl.remove tbl key followed by Hashtbl.add tbl key data .

       val iter : ('a -> 'b -> unit) -> ('a, 'b) t -> unit

       Hashtbl.iter f tbl applies f to all bindings in table tbl .  f receives the key as  first  argument,  and
       the associated value as second argument. Each binding is presented exactly once to f .

       The  order  in which the bindings are passed to f is unspecified.  However, if the table contains several
       bindings for the same key, they are passed to f in reverse order  of  introduction,  that  is,  the  most
       recent binding is passed first.

       If  the  hash table was created in non-randomized mode, the order in which the bindings are enumerated is
       reproducible between successive runs of the program, and even  between  minor  versions  of  OCaml.   For
       randomized hash tables, the order of enumeration is entirely random.

       The behavior is not specified if the hash table is modified by f during the iteration.

       val filter_map_inplace : ('a -> 'b -> 'b option) -> ('a, 'b) t -> unit

       Hashtbl.filter_map_inplace f tbl applies f to all bindings in table tbl and update each binding depending
       on  the  result  of  f .  If f returns None , the binding is discarded.  If it returns Some new_val , the
       binding is update to associate the key to new_val .

       Other comments for Hashtbl.iter apply as well.

       Since 4.03

       val fold : ('a -> 'b -> 'acc -> 'acc) -> ('a, 'b) t -> 'acc -> 'acc

       Hashtbl.fold f tbl init computes (f kN dN ... (f k1 d1 init)...)  , where k1 ... kN are the keys  of  all
       bindings in tbl , and d1 ... dN are the associated values.  Each binding is presented exactly once to f .

       The  order  in which the bindings are passed to f is unspecified.  However, if the table contains several
       bindings for the same key, they are passed to f in reverse order  of  introduction,  that  is,  the  most
       recent binding is passed first.

       If  the  hash table was created in non-randomized mode, the order in which the bindings are enumerated is
       reproducible between successive runs of the program, and even  between  minor  versions  of  OCaml.   For
       randomized hash tables, the order of enumeration is entirely random.

       The behavior is not specified if the hash table is modified by f during the iteration.

       val length : ('a, 'b) t -> int

       Hashtbl.length  tbl  returns  the number of bindings in tbl .  It takes constant time.  Multiple bindings
       are counted once each, so Hashtbl.length gives the number of times Hashtbl.iter calls its first argument.

       val randomize : unit -> unit

       After a  call  to  Hashtbl.randomize()  ,  hash  tables  are  created  in  randomized  mode  by  default:
       Hashtbl.create returns randomized hash tables, unless the ~random:false optional parameter is given.  The
       same effect can be achieved by setting the R parameter in the OCAMLRUNPARAM environment variable.

       It  is  recommended  that  applications  or  Web  frameworks  that need to protect themselves against the
       denial-of-service attack described in Hashtbl.create  call  Hashtbl.randomize()  at  initialization  time
       before any domains are created.

       Note  that  once  Hashtbl.randomize() was called, there is no way to revert to the non-randomized default
       behavior of Hashtbl.create .  This is intentional.  Non-randomized hash tables can still be created using
       Hashtbl.create ~random:false .

       Since 4.00

       val is_randomized : unit -> bool

       Return true if the tables are currently created in randomized mode by default, false otherwise.

       Since 4.03

       val rebuild : ?random:bool -> ('a, 'b) t -> ('a, 'b) t

       Return a copy of the given hashtable.  Unlike Hashtbl.copy , Hashtbl.rebuild h re-hashes  all  the  (key,
       value)  entries  of the original table h .  The returned hash table is randomized if h was randomized, or
       the optional random parameter is true, or if the  default  is  to  create  randomized  hash  tables;  see
       Hashtbl.create for more information.

       Hashtbl.rebuild  can safely be used to import a hash table built by an old version of the Hashtbl module,
       then marshaled to persistent storage.  After unmarshaling, apply Hashtbl.rebuild to produce a hash  table
       for the current version of the Hashtbl module.

       Since 4.12

       type statistics = {
        num_bindings  :  int  ;   (*  Number  of  bindings  present  in  the  table.   Same value as returned by
       Hashtbl.length .
        *)
        num_buckets : int ;  (* Number of buckets in the table.
        *)
        max_bucket_length : int ;  (* Maximal number of bindings per bucket.
        *)
        bucket_histogram  :  int  array  ;   (*  Histogram  of  bucket  sizes.   This  array  histo  has  length
       max_bucket_length + 1 .  The value of histo.(i) is the number of buckets whose size is i .
        *)
        }

       Since 4.00

       val stats : ('a, 'b) t -> statistics

       Hashtbl.stats tbl returns statistics about the table tbl : number of buckets, size of the biggest bucket,
       distribution of buckets by size.

       Since 4.00

   Hash tables and Sequences
       val to_seq : ('a, 'b) t -> ('a * 'b) Seq.t

       Iterate  on  the  whole  table.   The  order in which the bindings appear in the sequence is unspecified.
       However, if the table contains several bindings for the same  key,  they  appear  in  reversed  order  of
       introduction, that is, the most recent binding appears first.

       The behavior is not specified if the hash table is modified during the iteration.

       Since 4.07

       val to_seq_keys : ('a, 'b) t -> 'a Seq.t

       Same as Seq.map fst (to_seq m)

       Since 4.07

       val to_seq_values : ('a, 'b) t -> 'b Seq.t

       Same as Seq.map snd (to_seq m)

       Since 4.07

       val add_seq : ('a, 'b) t -> ('a * 'b) Seq.t -> unit

       Add the given bindings to the table, using Hashtbl.add

       Since 4.07

       val replace_seq : ('a, 'b) t -> ('a * 'b) Seq.t -> unit

       Add the given bindings to the table, using Hashtbl.replace

       Since 4.07

       val of_seq : ('a * 'b) Seq.t -> ('a, 'b) t

       Build  a  table  from  the  given  bindings.  The bindings are added in the same order they appear in the
       sequence, using Hashtbl.replace_seq , which means that if two pairs have the same key,  only  the  latest
       one will appear in the table.

       Since 4.07

   Functorial interface
       The  functorial  interface  allows  the  use  of  specific  comparison  and  hash  functions,  either for
       performance/security concerns, or because keys are not hashable/comparable with the polymorphic builtins.

       For instance, one might want to specialize a table for integer keys:
             module IntHash =
               struct
                 type t = int
                 let equal i j = i=j
                 let hash i = i land max_int
               end

             module IntHashtbl = Hashtbl.Make(IntHash)

             let h = IntHashtbl.create 17 in
             IntHashtbl.add h 12 "hello"

       This creates a new module IntHashtbl , with a new type 'a
           IntHashtbl.t of tables from int to 'a . In this example, h contains string  values  so  its  type  is
       string IntHashtbl.t .

       Note  that  the new type 'a IntHashtbl.t is not compatible with the type ('a,'b) Hashtbl.t of the generic
       interface. For example, Hashtbl.length h would not type-check, you must use IntHashtbl.length .

       module type HashedType = sig end

       The input signature of the functor Hashtbl.Make .

       module type S = sig end

       The output signature of the functor Hashtbl.Make .

       module Make : (H : HashedType) -> sig end

       Functor building an implementation of the  hashtable  structure.   The  functor  Hashtbl.Make  returns  a
       structure  containing  a  type  key of keys and a type 'a t of hash tables associating data of type 'a to
       keys of type key .  The operations perform similarly to those of  the  generic  interface,  but  use  the
       hashing  and  equality  functions  specified  in  the  functor argument H instead of generic equality and
       hashing.  Since the hash function is not seeded, the create operation  of  the  result  structure  always
       returns non-randomized hash tables.

       module type SeededHashedType = sig end

       The input signature of the functor Hashtbl.MakeSeeded .

       Since 4.00

       module type SeededS = sig end

       The output signature of the functor Hashtbl.MakeSeeded .

       Since 4.00

       module MakeSeeded : (H : SeededHashedType) -> sig end

       Functor  building an implementation of the hashtable structure.  The functor Hashtbl.MakeSeeded returns a
       structure containing a type key of keys and a type 'a t of hash tables associating data  of  type  'a  to
       keys  of  type  key  .   The  operations perform similarly to those of the generic interface, but use the
       seeded hashing and equality functions specified in the functor argument H instead of generic equality and
       hashing.  The create operation of the result  structure  supports  the  ~random  optional  parameter  and
       returns  randomized  hash  tables  if  ~random:true  is  passed  or  if randomization is globally on (see
       Hashtbl.randomize ).

       Since 4.00

   The polymorphic hash functions
       val hash : 'a -> int

       Hashtbl.hash x associates a nonnegative integer to any value of any type. It is guaranteed that if x =  y
       or  Stdlib.compare  x  y  =  0 , then hash x = hash y .  Moreover, hash always terminates, even on cyclic
       structures.

       val seeded_hash : int -> 'a -> int

       A variant of Hashtbl.hash that is further parameterized by an integer seed.

       Since 4.00

       val hash_param : int -> int -> 'a -> int

       Hashtbl.hash_param meaningful total x computes a hash value for x , with the same properties as for  hash
       .  The  two extra integer parameters meaningful and total give more precise control over hashing. Hashing
       performs a breadth-first, left-to-right  traversal  of  the  structure  x  ,  stopping  after  meaningful
       meaningful  nodes  were  encountered,  or  total nodes (meaningful or not) were encountered.  If total as
       specified by the user exceeds a  certain  value,  currently  256,  then  it  is  capped  to  that  value.
       Meaningful  nodes  are:  integers;  floating-point  numbers;  strings; characters; booleans; and constant
       constructors. Larger values of meaningful and total means that more  nodes  are  taken  into  account  to
       compute the final hash value, and therefore collisions are less likely to happen.  However, hashing takes
       longer.  The  parameters meaningful and total govern the tradeoff between accuracy and speed.  As default
       choices, Hashtbl.hash and Hashtbl.seeded_hash take meaningful = 10 and total = 100 .

       val seeded_hash_param : int -> int -> int -> 'a -> int

       A  variant  of  Hashtbl.hash_param  that  is  further  parameterized  by   an   integer   seed.    Usage:
       Hashtbl.seeded_hash_param meaningful total seed x .

       Since 4.00

   Examples
   Basic Example
           (* 0...99 *)
           let seq = Seq.ints 0 |> Seq.take 100

           (* build from Seq.t *)
           # let tbl =
               seq
               |> Seq.map (fun x -> x, string_of_int x)
               |> Hashtbl.of_seq
           val tbl : (int, string) Hashtbl.t = <abstr>

           # Hashtbl.length tbl
           - : int = 100

           # Hashtbl.find_opt tbl 32
           - : string option = Some "32"

           # Hashtbl.find_opt tbl 166
           - : string option = None

           # Hashtbl.replace tbl 166 "one six six"
           - : unit = ()

           # Hashtbl.find_opt tbl 166
           - : string option = Some "one six six"

           # Hashtbl.length tbl
           - : int = 101

   Counting Elements
       Given  a  sequence  of  elements  (here, a Seq.t ), we want to count how many times each distinct element
       occurs in the sequence. A simple way to do this, assuming the elements are comparable and hashable, is to
       use a hash table that maps elements to their number of occurrences.

       Here we illustrate that principle using a sequence of (ascii) characters (type char ).  We use  a  custom
       Char_tbl specialized for char .

           # module Char_tbl = Hashtbl.Make(struct
               type t = char
               let equal = Char.equal
               let hash = Hashtbl.hash
             end)

           (*  count distinct occurrences of chars in [seq] *)
           # let count_chars (seq : char Seq.t) : _ list =
               let counts = Char_tbl.create 16 in
               Seq.iter
                 (fun c ->
                   let count_c =
                     Char_tbl.find_opt counts c
                     |> Option.value ~default:0
                   in
                   Char_tbl.replace counts c (count_c + 1))
                 seq;
               (* turn into a list *)
               Char_tbl.fold (fun c n l -> (c,n) :: l) counts []
                 |> List.sort (fun (c1,_)(c2,_) -> Char.compare c1 c2)
           val count_chars : Char_tbl.key Seq.t -> (Char.t * int) list = <fun>

           (* basic seq from a string *)
           # let seq = String.to_seq "hello world, and all the camels in it!"
           val seq : char Seq.t = <fun>

           # count_chars seq
           - : (Char.t * int) list =
           [(' ', 7); ('!', 1); (',', 1); ('a', 3); ('c', 1); ('d', 2); ('e', 3);
            ('h', 2); ('i', 2); ('l', 6); ('m', 1); ('n', 2); ('o', 2); ('r', 1);
            ('s', 1); ('t', 2); ('w', 1)]

           (* "abcabcabc..." *)
           # let seq2 =
               Seq.cycle (String.to_seq "abc") |> Seq.take 31
           val seq2 : char Seq.t = <fun>

           # String.of_seq seq2
           - : String.t = "abcabcabcabcabcabcabcabcabcabca"

           # count_chars seq2
           - : (Char.t * int) list = [('a', 11); ('b', 10); ('c', 10)]

OCamldoc                                           2025-01-27                                        Hashtbl(3o)