Collection Interfaces - The primary means by
which collections are manipulated.
Collection
- A group of objects. No assumptions are made about the order of
the collection (if any), or whether it may contain duplicate
elements.
Set - The
familiar set abstraction. No duplicate elements permitted. May or
may not be ordered. Extends the Collection interface.
List -
Ordered collection, also known as a sequence. Duplicates are
generally permitted. Allows positional access. Extends the
Collection interface.
Queue - A
collection designed for holding elements prior to processing.
Besides basic Collection operations, queues provide
additional insertion, extraction, and inspection operations.
Deque - A
double ended queue, supporting element insertion and
removal at both ends. Extends the Queue interface.
Map - A
mapping from keys to values. Each key can map to at most one
value.
SortedSet
- A set whose elements are automatically sorted, either in their
natural ordering (see the Comparable
interface), or by a Comparator
object provided when a SortedSet instance is created.
Extends the Set interface.
SortedMap
- A map whose mappings are automatically sorted by key, either in
the keys' natural ordering or by a comparator provided when
a SortedMap instance is created. Extends the Map
interface.
NavigableSet
- A SortedSet extended with navigation methods reporting
closest matches for given search targets. A NavigableSet
may be accessed and traversed in either ascending or descending
order.
NavigableMap
- A SortedMap extended with navigation methods returning
the closest matches for given search targets. A
NavigableMap may be accessed and traversed in either
ascending or descending key order.
BlockingQueue
- A Queue with operations that wait for the queue to
become non-empty when retrieving an element, and that wait for
space to become available in the queue when storing an element.
(This interface is part of java.util.concurrent.)
BlockingDeque
- A Deque with operations that wait for the deque to
become non-empty when retrieving an element, and wait for space to
become available in the deque when storing an element. Extends both
the Deque and BlockingQueue interfaces. (This
interface is part of java.util.concurrent.)
ConcurrentMap
- A Map with atomic putIfAbsent, remove,
and replace methods. (This interface is part of
java.util.concurrent.)
General-Purpose Implementations - The primary
implementations of the collection interfaces.
HashSet - Hash
table implementation of the Set interface. The best
all-around implementation of the Set interface.
TreeSet
- Red-black tree implementation of the NavigableSet
interface.
LinkedHashSet
- Hash table and linked list implementation of the Set
interface. An insertion-ordered Set implementation that
runs nearly as fast as HashSet.
ArrayList -
Resizable-array implementation of the List interface.
(Essentially an unsynchronized Vector.) The best
all-around implementation of the List interface.
ArrayDeque -
Efficient resizable-array implementation of the Deque
interface.
LinkedList
- Doubly-linked list implementation of the List interface.
May provide better performance than the ArrayList
implementation if elements are frequently inserted or deleted
within the list. Also implements the Deque interface. When
accessed via the Queue interface, LinkedList
behaves as a FIFO queue.
PriorityQueue
- Heap implementation of an unbounded priority queue.
HashMap - Hash
table implementation of the Map interface. (Essentially an
unsynchronized Hashtable that supports null keys
and values.) The best all-around implementation of the Map
interface.
TreeMap
Red-black tree implementation of the NavigableMap
interface.
LinkedHashMap
- Hash table and linked list implementation of the Map
interface. An insertion-ordered Map implementation that
runs nearly as fast as HashMap. Also useful for building
caches (see
removeEldestEntry(Map.Entry) ).
Wrapper Implementations -
Functionality-enhancing implementations for use with other
implementations. Accessed solely through static factory methods.
Collections.unmodifiableInterface -
Return an unmodifiable view of a specified collection that throws
an UnsupportedOperationException if the user attempts to
modify it.
Collections.synchronizedInterface
- Return a synchronized collection that is backed by the specified
(typically unsynchronized) collection. As long as all accesses to
the backing collection are through the returned collection,
thread-safety is guaranteed.
Collections.checkedInterface - Return a
dynamically typesafe view of the specified collection, which throws
a ClassCastException if a client attempts to add an
element of the wrong type. The generics mechanism in the language
provides compile-time (static) type checking, but it is possible to
defeat this mechanism. Dynamically typesafe views eliminate this
possibility entirely.
Convenience Implementations - High-performance
"mini-implementations" of the collection interfaces.
Arrays.asList
- Allows an array to be viewed as a list.
singleton,
singletonList, and singletonMap
- Returns an immutable "singleton" set, list, or map, containing
only the specified object (or key-value mapping).
nCopies - Returns an immutable list consisting of n
copies of a specified object.
Legacy Implementations - Older collection
classes have been retrofitted to implement the collection
interfaces.
Vector -
Synchronized resizable-array implementation of the List
interface with additional "legacy methods."
Hashtable
- Synchronized hash table implementation of the Map
interface that does not allow null keys or values, with
additional "legacy methods."
Special Purpose Implementations
WeakHashMap
- An implementation of the Map interface that stores only
weak
references to its keys. Storing only weak references allows
key-value pairs to be garbage-collected when the key is no longer
referenced outside of the WeakHashMap. This class provides
the easiest way to harness the power of weak references. It is
useful for implementing "registry-like" data structures, where the
utility of an entry vanishes when its key is no longer reachable by
any thread.
IdentityHashMap
- Identity-based Map implementation based on a hash table. This
class is useful for topology-preserving object graph
transformations (such as serialization or deep-copying). To perform
such transformations, you need to maintain an identity-based "node
table" that keeps track of which objects have already been seen.
Identity-based maps are also used to maintain
object-to-meta-information mappings in dynamic debuggers and
similar systems. Finally, identity-based maps are useful in
thwarting "spoof attacks" resulting from intentionally perverse
equals methods. (IdentityHashMap never invokes the equals
method on its keys.) An added benefit of this implementation is
that it is fast.
CopyOnWriteArrayList
- a List implementation backed by an copy-on-write array.
All mutative operations (such as add, set, and
remove) are implemented by making a new copy of the array.
No synchronization is necessary, even during iteration, and
iterators are guaranteed never to throw
ConcurrentModificationException. This implementation is
well-suited to maintaining event-handler lists (where change is
infrequent, and traversal is frequent and potentially
time-consuming).
CopyOnWriteArraySet
- A Set implementation backed by a copy-on-write array.
This implementation is similar in nature to
CopyOnWriteArrayList. Unlike most Set
implementations, the add, remove, and
contains methods require time proportional to the size of
the set. This implementation is well-suited to maintaining
event-handler lists that must prevent duplicates.
EnumSet - a
high-performance Set implementation backed by a
bit-vector. All elements of each EnumSet instance must be
elements of a single enum type.
EnumMap - a
high-performance Map implementation backed by an array.
All keys in each EnumMap instance must be elements of a
single enum type.
Concurrent Implementations - These
implementations are part of java.util.concurrent.
ConcurrentLinkedQueue
- An unbounded FIFO (first-in first-out) queue based on linked
nodes.
LinkedBlockingQueue - An optionally bounded FIFO
blocking queue backed by linked nodes.
DelayQueue
- A time-based scheduling queue backed by a priority heap.
SynchronousQueue
- A simple rendezvous mechanism utilizing the
BlockingQueue interface.
LinkedBlockingDeque - An optionally bounded FIFO
blocking deque backed by linked nodes.
ConcurrentHashMap
- A highly concurrent, high-performance ConcurrentMap
implementation based on a hash table. This implementation never
blocks when performing retrievals and allows the client to select
the concurrency level for updates. It is intended as a drop-in
replacement for Hashtable: in
addition to implementing ConcurrentMap, it supports all of
the "legacy" methods peculiar to Hashtable.
Algorithms - The Collections
class contains these useful static methods:
sort(List)
- Sorts a list using a merge sort algorithm, which provides
average-case performance comparable to a high-quality quicksort,
guaranteed O(n*log n) performance (unlike quicksort), and
stability (unlike quicksort). (A stable sort is one that
does not reorder equal elements.)
newSetFromMap(Map) - Creates a general purpose
Set implementation from a general purpose Map
implementation.
asLifoQueue(Deque) - Returns a view of a
Deque as a Last-in-first-out (Lifo) Queue.
Infrastructure
Iterators - Similar to the familiar Enumeration
interface, but more powerful, and with improved method names.
Iterator
- In addition to the functionality of the Enumeration
interface, allows the user to remove elements from the backing
collection with well defined, useful semantics.
ListIterator
- Iterator for use with lists. In addition to the functionality of
the Iterator interface, supports bi-directional iteration,
element replacement, element insertion and index retrieval.
Ordering
Comparable
- Imparts a natural ordering to classes that implement it.
The natural ordering may be used to sort a list or maintain order
in a sorted set or map. Many classes have been retrofitted to
implement this interface.
Comparator
- Represents an order relation, which may be used to sort a list or
maintain order in a sorted set or map. Can override a type's
natural ordering, or order objects of a type that does not
implement the Comparable interface.
ConcurrentModificationException - Thrown by iterators
and list iterators if the backing collection is modified
unexpectedly while the iteration is in progress. Also thrown by
sublist views of lists if the backing list is modified
unexpectedly.
Performance
RandomAccess
- Marker interface that allows List implementations to
indicate that they support fast (generally constant time) random
access. This allows generic algorithms to alter their behavior to
provide good performance when applied to either random or
sequential access lists.
Array Utilities
Arrays -
Contains static methods to sort, search, compare, hash, copy,
resize, convert to String, and fill arrays of primitives
and Objects.