Sunday, August 4, 2013

Java Collections Framework Part 7 - Collections Utility

Collections Utility class
The java.util.Collections class is an utility class, an utility class defines a set of static methods that perform common operations, all the methods of Collections are public and static.

The java API says about the Collection class “This class consists exclusively of static methods that operate on or return collections. It contains polymorphic algorithms that operate on collections, "wrappers", which return a new collection backed by a specified collection, and a few other odds and ends”.

The Collections class has methods for changing the order of lists:

void reverse(List<?> list): Reverses the order of the elements
void rotate(List<?> list, int distance): Rotates the elements in the specified list by the specified distance.
void shuffle(List<?> list): Randomly permutes the list elements
void shuffle(List<?> list, Random rnd): Randomly permutes the list using the randomness source rnd
<T extends Comparable<? super T>> void sort(List<T> list): Sorts the supplied list using natural ordering
<T> void sort(List<T> list, Comparator<? super T> c): Sorts the supplied list using the supplied ordering
void swap(List<?> list, int i, int j): Swaps the elements at the specified positions

It has methods for changing the contents of a list, the copy() transfers elements from the source list into an initial a the destination list, the fill() replaces every element of a list with a specified object and replaceAll() replaces every occurrence of one value in a list with another.

<T> void copy(List<? super T> dest, List<? extends T> src): Copies all of the elements from one list into another
<T> void fill(List<? super T> list, T obj): Replaces every element of list with obj
<T> boolean replaceAll(List<T> list, T old, T new): Replaces all occurrences of old in list with new.

It has methods for finding elements in ordered collections:

<T extends Object & Comparable<? super T>> T max(Collection<? extends T> coll): Returns the maximum element using natural ordering.
<T> T max(Collection<? extends T> coll, Comparator<? super T> comp): Returns the maximum element using the supplied comparator
<T extends Object & Comparable<? super T>> T min(Collection<? extends T> coll): Returns the minimum element using natural ordering
<T> T min(Collection<? extends T> coll, Comparator<? super T> comp): Returns the minimum element using the supplied comparator
<T> int binarySearch(List<? extends Comparable<? super T>> list, T key): Searches for key using binary search
<T> int binarySearch(List<? extends T> list, T key, Comparator<? super T> c): Searches for key using binary search
int indexOfSubList(List<?> source, List<?> target): Finds the first sublist of source which matches target
int lastIndexOfSubList(List<?> source, List<?> target): Finds the last sublist of source which matches target

Some methods require that the collection should be ordered before using them otherwise their outcome will make no sense, this is the case of the binarySearch(), if the list is not ordered then the binarySearch() will return a wrong value, Example:


In the example you can see how the collection is ordered before using the binarySearch() method.

Some methods are overloaded with a version that takes a Comparator, in this case the type of the Collection doesn't have to implement the Comparable interface, Example:


In the example you can see that the List is of type Person and it doesn't implements the Comparable interface but at the time to order the collection and search it, a Comparator instance is used it.

The Collections class has methods for creating collections:

<T> List<T> emptyList(): Returns the empty list (immutable)
<K,V> Map<K,V> emptyMap(): Returns the empty map (immutable)
<T> Set<T> emptySet(): Returns the empty set (immutable)

These methods can be used to indicate there are no values, the collections returned by this methods are immutable, this means no elements can be added to them.

Example:

The previous example will throw a java.lang.UnsupportedOperationException at the time the new element was added.

There are also methods for creating collections containing only a single element.

<T> Set<T> singleton(T o): Returns an immutable set containing only the specified object.
<T> List<T> singletonList(T o): Returns an immutable list containing only the specified object.
<K,V> Map<K,V> singletonMap(K key, V value): Returns an immutable map, mapping only the key K to the value V

The collections returned by this methods are also immutable and no elements can be added to them.

Example:


The previous example will throw a java.lang.UnsupportedOperationException at the time the new element was added.

There is a method that creates a list containing a number of copies of a given object.

<T> List<T> nCopies(int n, T o): Returns an immutable list containing n references to the object o

Sometimes a collection implementation is not synchronized, in order to make a collection thread safe the Collections class provides methods for this purpose:

<T> Collection<T> synchronizedCollection(Collection<T> c);
<T> Set<T> synchronizedSet(Set<T> s);
<T> List<T> synchronizedList(List<T> list);
<K, V> Map<K, V> synchronizedMap(Map<K, V> m);
<T> SortedSet<T> synchronizedSortedSet(SortedSet<T> s);
<K, V> SortedMap<K, V> synchronizedSortedMap(SortedMap<K, V> m);

Basically this last post is a summary of the java.util.Collections class, but if I was doing a tutorial about collections I had to add it. So with this I finish the tutorial and I hope you can find a quick reference to the collections API and learn something new.




2 comments:

  1. http://www.javaproficiency.com/2015/05/java-collections-framework-tutorials.html

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  2. Thanks for sharing nice article .There are good Java Collection Tutorials with example

    ReplyDelete