System.Collections.Generic.Dictionary<TKey, TValue>
and System.Collections.Hashtable
classes both maintain a hash table data structure internally. None of them guarantee preserving the order of items.
Leaving boxing/unboxing issues aside, most of the time, they should have very similar performance.
The primary structural difference between them is that Dictionary
relies on chaining (maintaining a list of items for each hash table bucket) to resolve collisions whereas Hashtable
uses rehashing for collision resolution (when a collision occurs, tries another hash function to map the key to a bucket).
There is little benefit to use Hashtable
class if you are targeting for .NET Framework 2.0+. It's effectively rendered obsolete by Dictionary<TKey, TValue>
.
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