I'm still learning C# and was surprised to find out that a List<T> is much more like a std::vector than a std::list. Can someone describe all the C# collections in terms of the STL (or if STL comparisons are difficult, standard conceptual data types with Wikipedia links? I expect the reference would be widely useful.
A minimal list of collections of interest include (feel free to add others):
Edit: I just found this similar question that may be of interest: Mapping between stl C++ and C# containers
Here's what I've found (ignoring the old non-generic collections):
Array - C array, though the .NET Array can have a non-zero starting index.List<T> - std::vector<T>
Dictionary<TKey, TValue> - unordered_map<Key, Data> HashSet<T> - unordered_set<Key>
SortedDictionary<TKey, TValue> - std::map<Key, Data>
SortedList<TKey, TValue> - equivalent to a std::vector<T> but keeping it ordered by using binary search + insert when adding elements.SortedSet<T> - std::set<Key>
Queue<T> - std::queue<T>
Stack<T> - std::stack<T>
LinkedList<T> - std::list<T>
Notably missing from the .NET collections are the "multi-" variants, e.g., multiset, multimap, etc. However, they have added a number of very useful threadsafe collections: the "Concurrent-" variants, e.g., ConcurrentDictionary, ConcurrentQueue, etc.
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