Showing posts with label Separate chaining. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Separate chaining. Show all posts

Friday, 23 March 2012

How HashMap works in Java ?

In computer science, a hash table or hash map is a data structure that uses a hash function to map identifying values, known as keys (e.g., a person's name), to their associated values (e.g., their telephone number). Thus, a hash table implements an associative array. The hash function is used to transform the key into the index (the hash) of an array element (the slot or bucket) where the corresponding value is to be sought.

Ideally, the hash function should map each possible key to a unique slot index, but this ideal is rarely achievable in practice (unless the hash keys are fixed; i.e. new entries are never added to the table after it is created). Instead, most hash table designs assume that hash collisions—different keys that map to the same hash value—will occur and must be accommodated in some way.The Java uses

Separate chaining collision resolution strategy to handle such events.