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During a code review I performed today for my colleague, I noticed a function that was defined as returning a boolean value, but in practice it returned only true. In a case of failure, this function threw an exception. I pointed it out and advised to change the return value to void (the code is written in C++). I had no doubt that this was wrong and was sure he had just overlooked it. To my co...
What issues / pitfalls must be considered when overriding equals and hashCode?
What is the best way to convert a Map<key,value> to a List<value>? Just iterate over all values and insert them in a list or am I overlooking something?
Why isn't Collection.remove(Object o) generic? Seems like Collection<E> could have boolean remove(E o); Then, when you accidentally try to remove (for example) Set<String> instead of each individual String from a Collection<String>, it would be a compile time error instead of a debugging problem later.
How do I get a PriorityQueue to sort on what I want it to sort on? Added: And is there a difference between the offer and add methods?
If I have a collection, such as Collection<String> strs, how can I get the first item out? I could just call an Iterator, take its first next(), then throw the Iterator away. Is there a less wasteful way to do it?
I can declare an array of maps using generics to specify the map type: private Map<String, Integer>[] myMaps; However, I can't figure out how to instantiate it properly: myMaps = new HashMap<String, Integer>[count]; // gives "generic array creation" error myMaps = new HashMap[count]; // gives an "unchecked or unsafe operation" warning myMaps = (Map<String, Integer>[])new H...
What is the difference between Collection and List in Java? When and which I should use?
What's the best algorithm for comparing two arrays to see if they have the same members? Assume there are no duplicates, the members can be in any order, and that neither is sorted. compare( [a, b, c, d], [b, a, d, c] ) ==> true compare( [a, b, e], [a, b, c] ) ==> false compare( [a, b, c], [a, b] ) ==> false
I am currently rediscovering Java (working with Ruby a lot recently), and I love the compilation-time checking of everything. It makes refactoring so easy. However, I miss playing fast-and-loose with types to do an each loop. This is my worst code. Is this as short as it can be? I have a collection called looperTracks, which has instances that implement Looper. I don't want to modify that col...
Is there a built-in way to join two arrays in ColdFusion, similar to JavaScript's array.concat()?
Hi I'm writing this question because I'm a newbie in ObjC and a lot of doubts came to my mind when trying to make my fist training app. The thing is that I have a strong background in C, I've been programming in Java for the last year and I've done some collage stuff with Smalltalk (I mencione this because those are my programming references and those are the languages I'm comparing ObjC with)....
My question is Interface Set has method add(E e) and it extends interface Collection. Interface Collection also has method add(E e) So why do we need the same method in interface Set , since it already extends interface Collection. What is the purpose ? I am stuck with that
From The Java Tutorials: In Java, a class can inherit from only one class but it can implement more than one interface. Therefore, objects can have multiple types: the type of their own class and the types of all the interfaces that they implement. This means that if a variable is declared to be the type of an interface, its value can reference any object that is instantiated from...
Did you know that : Map<Object,Object> m1 = new HashMap<Object, Object>(); Map<Object,Object> m2 = new HashMap<Object, Object>(); System.out.println("m1.equals(m2) = "+m1.equals(m2)); System.out.println("m1.keySet().equals(m2.keySet()) = " +m1.keySet().equals(m2.keySet())); System.out.println("m1.entrySet().equals(m2.entrySet()) = " +m1.entrySet(...
How to write generic operations on C++ STL containers? For example, Java has Collection interface, which every Java containers (except for maps) implements. I can do operations like add, remove, contains, and iterations regardless of whether the actual container is LinkedList, HashSet, ArrayBlockingQueue, etc. I find it very powerful. C++ has iterators, but what about operations like add and ...
Is there any practical difference between a Set and Collection in Java, besides the fact that a Collection can include the same element twice? They have the same methods. (For example, does Set give me more options to use libraries which accept Sets but not Collections?) edit: I can think of at least 5 different situations to judge this question. Can anyone else come up with more? I want to m...
Suppose I've got a method that accepts an array and processes each element in it using Java's built in for-each loop, like this: public static void myFun(SomeClass[] arr) { for (SomeClass sc : arr) { // Stuff is processed here } } This works just fine, but now I want to be able to pass the same method a List<SomeClass> instead. Am I destined to use Collection.toArray(T...
I have two arrayLists with 3 integer. I want to find a way to return the common elements of the two lists. Has anynody idea, how can I achieve this?
Is it possible to add elements to a collection while iterating over it? More specifically, I would like to iterate over a collection, and if an element satisfies a certain condition I want to add some other elements to the collection, and make sure that these added elements are iterated over as well. (I realise that this could lead to an unterminating loop, but I'm pretty sure it won't in my ...
Is there a way, to convert a List of Integers to Array of ints (not integer). Something like List to int []? Without looping through the list and manually converting the intger to int.
  /*
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  * ANY WARRANTY; without even the implied warranty of MERCHANTABILITY or
  * FITNESS FOR A PARTICULAR PURPOSE.  See the GNU General Public License
  * version 2 for more details (a copy is included in the LICENSE file that
  * accompanied this code).
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  * You should have received a copy of the GNU General Public License version
  * 2 along with this work; if not, write to the Free Software Foundation,
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  */
 
 package java.util;

The root interface in the collection hierarchy. A collection represents a group of objects, known as its elements. Some collections allow duplicate elements and others do not. Some are ordered and others unordered. The JDK does not provide any direct implementations of this interface: it provides implementations of more specific subinterfaces like Set and List. This interface is typically used to pass collections around and manipulate them where maximum generality is desired.

Bags or multisets (unordered collections that may contain duplicate elements) should implement this interface directly.

All general-purpose Collection implementation classes (which typically implement Collection indirectly through one of its subinterfaces) should provide two "standard" constructors: a void (no arguments) constructor, which creates an empty collection, and a constructor with a single argument of type Collection, which creates a new collection with the same elements as its argument. In effect, the latter constructor allows the user to copy any collection, producing an equivalent collection of the desired implementation type. There is no way to enforce this convention (as interfaces cannot contain constructors) but all of the general-purpose Collection implementations in the Java platform libraries comply.

The "destructive" methods contained in this interface, that is, the methods that modify the collection on which they operate, are specified to throw UnsupportedOperationException if this collection does not support the operation. If this is the case, these methods may, but are not required to, throw an UnsupportedOperationException if the invocation would have no effect on the collection. For example, invoking the addAll(java.util.Collection) method on an unmodifiable collection may, but is not required to, throw the exception if the collection to be added is empty.

Some collection implementations have restrictions on the elements that they may contain. For example, some implementations prohibit null elements, and some have restrictions on the types of their elements. Attempting to add an ineligible element throws an unchecked exception, typically NullPointerException or ClassCastException. Attempting to query the presence of an ineligible element may throw an exception, or it may simply return false; some implementations will exhibit the former behavior and some will exhibit the latter. More generally, attempting an operation on an ineligible element whose completion would not result in the insertion of an ineligible element into the collection may throw an exception or it may succeed, at the option of the implementation. Such exceptions are marked as "optional" in the specification for this interface.

It is up to each collection to determine its own synchronization policy. In the absence of a stronger guarantee by the implementation, undefined behavior may result from the invocation of any method on a collection that is being mutated by another thread; this includes direct invocations, passing the collection to a method that might perform invocations, and using an existing iterator to examine the collection.

Many methods in Collections Framework interfaces are defined in terms of the equals method. For example, the specification for the contains(Object o) method says: "returns true if and only if this collection contains at least one element e such that (o==null ? e==null : o.equals(e))." This specification should not be construed to imply that invoking Collection.contains with a non-null argument o will cause o.equals(e) to be invoked for any element e. Implementations are free to implement optimizations whereby the equals invocation is avoided, for example, by first comparing the hash codes of the two elements. (The java.lang.Object.hashCode() specification guarantees that two objects with unequal hash codes cannot be equal.) More generally, implementations of the various Collections Framework interfaces are free to take advantage of the specified behavior of underlying java.lang.Object methods wherever the implementor deems it appropriate.

This interface is a member of the Java Collections Framework.

public interface Collection<E> extends Iterable<E> {
    // Query Operations

    
Returns the number of elements in this collection. If this collection contains more than Integer.MAX_VALUE elements, returns Integer.MAX_VALUE.

Returns:
the number of elements in this collection
    int size();

    
Returns true if this collection contains no elements.

Returns:
true if this collection contains no elements
    boolean isEmpty();

    
Returns true if this collection contains the specified element. More formally, returns true if and only if this collection contains at least one element e such that (o==null ? e==null : o.equals(e)).

Parameters:
o element whose presence in this collection is to be tested
Returns:
true if this collection contains the specified element
Throws:
java.lang.ClassCastException if the type of the specified element is incompatible with this collection (optional)
java.lang.NullPointerException if the specified element is null and this collection does not permit null elements (optional)
    boolean contains(Object o);

    
Returns an iterator over the elements in this collection. There are no guarantees concerning the order in which the elements are returned (unless this collection is an instance of some class that provides a guarantee).

Returns:
an Iterator over the elements in this collection
    Iterator<E> iterator();

    
Returns an array containing all of the elements in this collection. If this collection makes any guarantees as to what order its elements are returned by its iterator, this method must return the elements in the same order.

The returned array will be "safe" in that no references to it are maintained by this collection. (In other words, this method must allocate a new array even if this collection is backed by an array). The caller is thus free to modify the returned array.

This method acts as bridge between array-based and collection-based APIs.

Returns:
an array containing all of the elements in this collection
    Object[] toArray();

    
Returns an array containing all of the elements in this collection; the runtime type of the returned array is that of the specified array. If the collection fits in the specified array, it is returned therein. Otherwise, a new array is allocated with the runtime type of the specified array and the size of this collection.

If this collection fits in the specified array with room to spare (i.e., the array has more elements than this collection), the element in the array immediately following the end of the collection is set to null. (This is useful in determining the length of this collection only if the caller knows that this collection does not contain any null elements.)

If this collection makes any guarantees as to what order its elements are returned by its iterator, this method must return the elements in the same order.

Like the toArray() method, this method acts as bridge between array-based and collection-based APIs. Further, this method allows precise control over the runtime type of the output array, and may, under certain circumstances, be used to save allocation costs.

Suppose x is a collection known to contain only strings. The following code can be used to dump the collection into a newly allocated array of String:

     String[] y = x.toArray(new String[0]);
Note that toArray(new Object[0]) is identical in function to toArray().

Parameters:
a the array into which the elements of this collection are to be stored, if it is big enough; otherwise, a new array of the same runtime type is allocated for this purpose.
Returns:
an array containing all of the elements in this collection
Throws:
java.lang.ArrayStoreException if the runtime type of the specified array is not a supertype of the runtime type of every element in this collection
java.lang.NullPointerException if the specified array is null
    <T> T[] toArray(T[] a);
    // Modification Operations

    
Ensures that this collection contains the specified element (optional operation). Returns true if this collection changed as a result of the call. (Returns false if this collection does not permit duplicates and already contains the specified element.)

Collections that support this operation may place limitations on what elements may be added to this collection. In particular, some collections will refuse to add null elements, and others will impose restrictions on the type of elements that may be added. Collection classes should clearly specify in their documentation any restrictions on what elements may be added.

If a collection refuses to add a particular element for any reason other than that it already contains the element, it must throw an exception (rather than returning false). This preserves the invariant that a collection always contains the specified element after this call returns.

Parameters:
e element whose presence in this collection is to be ensured
Returns:
true if this collection changed as a result of the call
Throws:
java.lang.UnsupportedOperationException if the add operation is not supported by this collection
java.lang.ClassCastException if the class of the specified element prevents it from being added to this collection
java.lang.NullPointerException if the specified element is null and this collection does not permit null elements
java.lang.IllegalArgumentException if some property of the element prevents it from being added to this collection
java.lang.IllegalStateException if the element cannot be added at this time due to insertion restrictions
    boolean add(E e);

    
Removes a single instance of the specified element from this collection, if it is present (optional operation). More formally, removes an element e such that (o==null ? e==null : o.equals(e)), if this collection contains one or more such elements. Returns true if this collection contained the specified element (or equivalently, if this collection changed as a result of the call).

Parameters:
o element to be removed from this collection, if present
Returns:
true if an element was removed as a result of this call
Throws:
java.lang.ClassCastException if the type of the specified element is incompatible with this collection (optional)
java.lang.NullPointerException if the specified element is null and this collection does not permit null elements (optional)
java.lang.UnsupportedOperationException if the remove operation is not supported by this collection
    boolean remove(Object o);
    // Bulk Operations

    
Returns true if this collection contains all of the elements in the specified collection.

Parameters:
c collection to be checked for containment in this collection
Returns:
true if this collection contains all of the elements in the specified collection
Throws:
java.lang.ClassCastException if the types of one or more elements in the specified collection are incompatible with this collection (optional)
java.lang.NullPointerException if the specified collection contains one or more null elements and this collection does not permit null elements (optional), or if the specified collection is null
See also:
contains(java.lang.Object)
    boolean containsAll(Collection<?> c);

    
Adds all of the elements in the specified collection to this collection (optional operation). The behavior of this operation is undefined if the specified collection is modified while the operation is in progress. (This implies that the behavior of this call is undefined if the specified collection is this collection, and this collection is nonempty.)

Parameters:
c collection containing elements to be added to this collection
Returns:
true if this collection changed as a result of the call
Throws:
java.lang.UnsupportedOperationException if the addAll operation is not supported by this collection
java.lang.ClassCastException if the class of an element of the specified collection prevents it from being added to this collection
java.lang.NullPointerException if the specified collection contains a null element and this collection does not permit null elements, or if the specified collection is null
java.lang.IllegalArgumentException if some property of an element of the specified collection prevents it from being added to this collection
java.lang.IllegalStateException if not all the elements can be added at this time due to insertion restrictions
See also:
add(java.lang.Object)
    boolean addAll(Collection<? extends E> c);

    
Removes all of this collection's elements that are also contained in the specified collection (optional operation). After this call returns, this collection will contain no elements in common with the specified collection.

Parameters:
c collection containing elements to be removed from this collection
Returns:
true if this collection changed as a result of the call
Throws:
java.lang.UnsupportedOperationException if the removeAll method is not supported by this collection
java.lang.ClassCastException if the types of one or more elements in this collection are incompatible with the specified collection (optional)
java.lang.NullPointerException if this collection contains one or more null elements and the specified collection does not support null elements (optional), or if the specified collection is null
See also:
remove(java.lang.Object)
contains(java.lang.Object)
    boolean removeAll(Collection<?> c);

    
Retains only the elements in this collection that are contained in the specified collection (optional operation). In other words, removes from this collection all of its elements that are not contained in the specified collection.

Parameters:
c collection containing elements to be retained in this collection
Returns:
true if this collection changed as a result of the call
Throws:
java.lang.UnsupportedOperationException if the retainAll operation is not supported by this collection
java.lang.ClassCastException if the types of one or more elements in this collection are incompatible with the specified collection (optional)
java.lang.NullPointerException if this collection contains one or more null elements and the specified collection does not permit null elements (optional), or if the specified collection is null
See also:
remove(java.lang.Object)
contains(java.lang.Object)
    boolean retainAll(Collection<?> c);

    
Removes all of the elements from this collection (optional operation). The collection will be empty after this method returns.

Throws:
java.lang.UnsupportedOperationException if the clear operation is not supported by this collection
    void clear();
    // Comparison and hashing

    
Compares the specified object with this collection for equality.

While the Collection interface adds no stipulations to the general contract for the Object.equals, programmers who implement the Collection interface "directly" (in other words, create a class that is a Collection but is not a Set or a List) must exercise care if they choose to override the Object.equals. It is not necessary to do so, and the simplest course of action is to rely on Object's implementation, but the implementor may wish to implement a "value comparison" in place of the default "reference comparison." (The List and Set interfaces mandate such value comparisons.)

The general contract for the Object.equals method states that equals must be symmetric (in other words, a.equals(b) if and only if b.equals(a)). The contracts for List.equals and Set.equals state that lists are only equal to other lists, and sets to other sets. Thus, a custom equals method for a collection class that implements neither the List nor Set interface must return false when this collection is compared to any list or set. (By the same logic, it is not possible to write a class that correctly implements both the Set and List interfaces.)

Parameters:
o object to be compared for equality with this collection
Returns:
true if the specified object is equal to this collection
See also:
java.lang.Object.equals(java.lang.Object)
Set.equals(java.lang.Object)
List.equals(java.lang.Object)
    boolean equals(Object o);

    
Returns the hash code value for this collection. While the Collection interface adds no stipulations to the general contract for the Object.hashCode method, programmers should take note that any class that overrides the Object.equals method must also override the Object.hashCode method in order to satisfy the general contract for the Object.hashCodemethod. In particular, c1.equals(c2) implies that c1.hashCode()==c2.hashCode().

Returns:
the hash code value for this collection
See also:
java.lang.Object.hashCode()
java.lang.Object.equals(java.lang.Object)
    int hashCode();
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