Domanda

I am reading State of the Lambda: Libraries Edition, and am being surprised by one statement:

Under the section Streams, there is the following:

List<Shape> blue = shapes.stream()
                         .filter(s -> s.getColor() == BLUE)
                         .collect(Collectors.toList());

The document does not state what shapes actually is, and I do not know if it even matters.

What confuses me is the following: What kind of concrete List does this block of code return?

  • It assigns the variable to a List<Shape>, which is completely fine.
  • stream() nor filter() decide what kind of list to use.
  • Collectors.toList() neither specifies the concrete type of List.

So, what concrete type (subclass) of List is being used here? Are there any guarantees?

È stato utile?

Soluzione

So, what concrete type (subclass) of List is being used here? Are there any guarantees?

If you look at the documentation of Collectors#toList(), it states that - "There are no guarantees on the type, mutability, serializability, or thread-safety of the List returned". If you want a particular implementation to be returned, you can use Collectors#toCollection(Supplier) instead.

Supplier<List<Shape>> supplier = () -> new LinkedList<Shape>();

List<Shape> blue = shapes.stream()
            .filter(s -> s.getColor() == BLUE)
            .collect(Collectors.toCollection(supplier));

And from the lambda, you can return whatever implementation you want of List<Shape>.

Update:

Or, you can even use method reference:

List<Shape> blue = shapes.stream()
            .filter(s -> s.getColor() == BLUE)
            .collect(Collectors.toCollection(LinkedList::new));

Altri suggerimenti

Navigating through Netbeans (Ctrl + Click), I landed in this code. It seems to be using an ArrayList as Supplier.

public static <T> Collector<T, ?, List<T>> toList() {
    return new CollectorImpl<>((Supplier<List<T>>) ArrayList::new, List::add,
                               (left, right) -> { left.addAll(right); return left; },
                               CH_ID);
}

It doesn't matter, but the concrete type is non-generic as indeed all types are non-generic at runtime.

So, what concrete type (subclass) of List is being used here? Are there any guarantees?

I don't think so, but ArrayList or LinkedList seem likely.

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