# stringmap.js A fast and robust stringmap implementation that can hold any string keys, including `__proto__`, with minimal overhead compared to a plain object. Works in node and browsers. The API is created to be as close to the ES6 Map API as possible. Prefer `sm.remove("key")` for deleting a key. ES6 Map uses `map.delete("key")` instead and for that reason `sm['delete']("key")` is available as a stringmap alias as well. Never do `sm.delete("key")` unless you're certain to be in the land of ES5 or later. ## Examples Available in `examples.js` ```javascript var StringMap = require("stringmap"); var sm1 = new StringMap(); sm1.set("greeting", "yoyoma"); sm1.set("check", true); sm1.set("__proto__", -1); console.log(sm1.has("greeting")); // true console.log(sm1.get("__proto__")); // -1 sm1.remove("greeting"); console.log(sm1.keys()); // [ 'check', '__proto__' ] console.log(sm1.values()); // [ true, -1 ] console.log(sm1.items()); // [ [ 'check', true ], [ '__proto__', -1 ] ] console.log(sm1.toString()); // {"check":true,"__proto__":-1} var sm2 = new StringMap({ one: 1, two: 2, }); console.log(sm2.map(function(value, key) { return value * value; })); // [ 1, 4 ] sm2.forEach(function(value, key) { // ... }); console.log(sm2.isEmpty()); // false console.log(sm2.size()); // 2 var sm3 = sm1.clone(); sm3.merge(sm2); sm3.setMany({ a: {}, b: [], }); console.log(sm3.toString()); // {"check":true,"one":1,"two":2,"a":{},"b":[],"__proto__":-1} ``` ## Installation ### Node Install using npm npm install stringmap ```javascript var StringMap = require("stringmap"); ``` ### Browser Clone the repo and include it in a script tag git clone https://github.com/olov/stringmap.git ```html ```