This section describes several mini-implementations that can be more convenient and more efficient than general-purpose implementations when you don't need their full power. All the implementations in this section are made available via static factory methods rather than public
classes.
The
Arrays.asList
method returns a List
view of its array argument. Changes to the List
write through to the array and vice versa. The size of the collection is that of the array and cannot be changed. If the add
or the remove
method is called on the List
, an UnsupportedOperationException
will result.
The normal use of this implementation is as a bridge between array-based and collection-based APIs. It allows you to pass an array to a method expecting a Collection
or a List
. However, this implementation also has another use. If you need a fixed-size List
, it's more efficient than any general-purpose List
implementation. This is the idiom.
List<String> list = Arrays.asList(new String[size]);
Note that a reference to the backing array is not retained.
Occasionally you'll need an immutable List
consisting of multiple copies of the same element. The
Collections.nCopies
method returns such a list. This implementation has two main uses. The first is to initialize a newly created List
; for example, suppose you want an ArrayList
initially consisting of 1,000 null
elements. The following incantation does the trick.
List<Type> list = new ArrayList<Type>(Collections.nCopies(1000, (Type)null);
Of course, the initial value of each element need not be null
. The second main use is to grow an existing List
. For example, suppose you want to add 69 copies of the string "fruit bat"
to the end of a List<String>
. It's not clear why you'd want to do such a thing, but let's just suppose you did. The following is how you'd do it.
lovablePets.addAll(Collections.nCopies(69, "fruit bat"));
By using the form of addAll
that takes both an index and a Collection
, you can add the new elements to the middle of a List
instead of to the end of it.
Sometimes you'll need an immutable singleton Set
, which consists of a single, specified element. The
Collections.singleton
method returns such a Set
. One use of this implementation is to remove all occurrences of a specified element from a Collection
.
c.removeAll(Collections.singleton(e));
A related idiom removes all elements that map to a specified value from a Map
. For example, suppose you have a Map
job
that maps people to their line of work and suppose you want to eliminate all the lawyers. The following one-liner will do the deed.
job.values().removeAll(Collections.singleton(LAWYER));
One more use of this implementation is to provide a single input value to a method that is written to accept a collection of values.
The
Collections
class provides methods to return the empty Set
, List
, and Map
emptySet
,
emptyList
, and
emptyMap
. The main use of these constants is as input to methods that take a Collection
of values when you don't want to provide any values at all, as in this example.
tourist.declarePurchases(Collections.emptySet());