Hash : How does it work internally? Hash : How does it work internally? java java

Hash : How does it work internally?


  1. Here is a good explanation about hashing. For example you want to store the string "Rachel" you apply a hash function to that string to get a memory location. myHashFunction(key: "Rachel" value: "Rachel") --> 10. The function may return 10 for the input "Rachel" so assuming you have an array of size 100 you store "Rachel" at index 10. If you want to retrieve that element you just call GetmyHashFunction("Rachel") and it will return 10. Note that for this example the key is "Rachel" and the value is "Rachel" but you could use another value for that key for example birth date or an object. Your hash function may return the same memory location for two different inputs, in this case you will have a collision you if you are implementing your own hash table you have to take care of this maybe using a linked list or other techniques.

  2. Here are some common hash functions used. A good hash function satisfies that: each key is equally likely to hash to any of the n memory slots independently of where any other key has hashed to. One of the methods is called the division method. We map a key k into one of n slots by taking the remainder of k divided by n. h(k) = k mod n. For example if your array size is n = 100 and your key is an integer k = 15 then h(k) = 10.

  3. Hashtable is synchronised and Hashmap is not. Hashmap allows null values as key but Hashtable does not.

  4. The purpose of a hash table is to have O(c) constant time complexity in adding and getting the elements. In a linked list of size N if you want to get the last element you have to traverse all the list until you get it so the complexity is O(N). With a hash table if you want to retrieve an element you just pass the key and the hash function will return you the desired element. If the hash function is well implemented it will be in constant time O(c) This means you dont have to traverse all the elements stored in the hash table. You will get the element "instantly".

  5. Of couse a programer/developer computer scientist needs to know about data structures and complexity =)


  1. Hashing means generating a (hopefully) unique number that represents a value.
  2. Different types of values (Integer, String, etc) use different algorithms to compute a hashcode.
  3. HashMap and HashTable are maps; they are a collection of unqiue keys, each of which is associated with a value.
    Java doesn't have a HashList class. A HashSet is a set of unique values.
  4. Getting an item from a hashtable is constant-time with regard to the size of the table.
    Computing a hash is not necessarily constant-time with regard to the value being hashed.
    For example, computing the hash of a string involves iterating the string, and isn't constant-time with regard to the size of the string.
  5. These are things that people ought to know.


  1. Hashing is transforming a given entity (in java terms - an object) to some number (or sequence). The hash function is not reversable - i.e. you can't obtain the original object from the hash. Internally it is implemented (for java.lang.Object by getting some memory address by the JVM.

  2. The JVM address thing is unimportant detail. Each class can override the hashCode() method with its own algorithm. Modren Java IDEs allow for generating good hashCode methods.

  3. Hashtable and hashmap are the same thing. They key-value pairs, where keys are hashed. Hash lists and hashsets don't store values - only keys.

  4. Constant-time means that no matter how many entries there are in the hashtable (or any other collection), the number of operations needed to find a given object by its key is constant. That is - 1, or close to 1

  5. This is basic computer-science material, and it is supposed that everyone is familiar with it. I think google have specified that the hashtable is the most important data-structure in computer science.