- Go Tutorial
- Go - Home
- Go - Overview
- Go - Environment Setup
- Go - Program Structure
- Go - Basic Syntax
- Go - Data Types
- Go - Variables
- Go - Constants
- Go - Operators
- Go - Decision Making
- Go - Loops
- Go - Functions
- Go - Scope Rules
- Go - Strings
- Go - Arrays
- Go - Pointers
- Go - Structures
- Go - Slice
- Go - Range
- Go - Maps
- Go - Recursion
- Go - Type Casting
- Go - Interfaces
- Go - Error Handling
- Go Useful Resources
- Go - Questions and Answers
- Go - Quick Guide
- Go - Useful Resources
- Go - Discussion
Go - Maps
Go provides another important data type named map which maps unique keys to values. A key is an object that you use to retrieve a value at a later date. Given a key and a value, you can store the value in a Map object. After the value is stored, you can retrieve it by using its key.
Defining a Map
You must use make function to create a map.
/* declare a variable, by default map will be nil*/ var map_variable map[key_data_type]value_data_type /* define the map as nil map can not be assigned any value*/ map_variable = make(map[key_data_type]value_data_type)
Example
The following example illustrates how to create and use a map −
package main import "fmt" func main() { var countryCapitalMap map[string]string /* create a map*/ countryCapitalMap = make(map[string]string) /* insert key-value pairs in the map*/ countryCapitalMap["France"] = "Paris" countryCapitalMap["Italy"] = "Rome" countryCapitalMap["Japan"] = "Tokyo" countryCapitalMap["India"] = "New Delhi" /* print map using keys*/ for country := range countryCapitalMap { fmt.Println("Capital of",country,"is",countryCapitalMap[country]) } /* test if entry is present in the map or not*/ capital, ok := countryCapitalMap["United States"] /* if ok is true, entry is present otherwise entry is absent*/ if(ok){ fmt.Println("Capital of United States is", capital) } else { fmt.Println("Capital of United States is not present") } }
When the above code is compiled and executed, it produces the following result −
Capital of India is New Delhi Capital of France is Paris Capital of Italy is Rome Capital of Japan is Tokyo Capital of United States is not present
delete() Function
delete() function is used to delete an entry from a map. It requires the map and the corresponding key which is to be deleted. For example −
package main import "fmt" func main() { /* create a map*/ countryCapitalMap := map[string] string {"France":"Paris","Italy":"Rome","Japan":"Tokyo","India":"New Delhi"} fmt.Println("Original map") /* print map */ for country := range countryCapitalMap { fmt.Println("Capital of",country,"is",countryCapitalMap[country]) } /* delete an entry */ delete(countryCapitalMap,"France"); fmt.Println("Entry for France is deleted") fmt.Println("Updated map") /* print map */ for country := range countryCapitalMap { fmt.Println("Capital of",country,"is",countryCapitalMap[country]) } }
When the above code is compiled and executed, it produces the following result −
Original Map Capital of France is Paris Capital of Italy is Rome Capital of Japan is Tokyo Capital of India is New Delhi Entry for France is deleted Updated Map Capital of India is New Delhi Capital of Italy is Rome Capital of Japan is Tokyo
Advertisements