The Java Tutorials have been written for JDK 8. Examples and practices described in this page don't take advantage of improvements introduced in later releases.
forEach aggregate operation differs from the enhanced
for statement
or iterators.
forEach aggregate operation lets the system decide "how" the iteration takes place.
Using aggregate operations lets
you focus on "what" instead of "how."
double average = roster
.stream()
.filter(p -> p.getGender() == Person.Sex.MALE)
.mapToInt(Person::getAge)
.average()
.getAsDouble();
filter, mapToInt average average returns an OptionalDouble. The
getAsDouble method is then invoked on that returned object. It is always a good
idea to consult the
API Specification for information about whether an operation is intermediate
or terminal.
p -> p.getGender() == Person.Sex.MALE
is an example of what?
Person::getAge
is an example of what?
Stream.reduce method
and the Stream.collect method.
Stream.reduce always creates a new value when it processes an element.
Stream.collect modifies (or mutates) the existing value.
List, would Stream.reduce or
Stream.collect be the
most appropriate operation to use?
List.
List<String> namesOfMaleMembersCollect = roster
.stream()
.filter(p -> p.getGender() == Person.Sex.MALE)
.map(p -> p.getName())
.collect(Collectors.toList());
parallelStream() instead of stream().
for statement as a
pipeline with lambda expressions. Hint: Use the
filter intermediate operation and the forEach terminal
operation.
for (Person p : roster) {
if (p.getGender() == Person.Sex.MALE) {
System.out.println(p.getName());
}
}
roster
.stream()
.filter(e -> e.getGender() == Person.Sex.MALE)
.forEach(e -> System.out.println(e.getName());
for loops. Hint: Make a pipeline that invokes the filter, sorted, and
collect
operations, in that order.
List<Album> favs = new ArrayList<>();
for (Album a : albums) {
boolean hasFavorite = false;
for (Track t : a.tracks) {
if (t.rating >= 4) {
hasFavorite = true;
break;
}
}
if (hasFavorite)
favs.add(a);
}
Collections.sort(favs, new Comparator<Album>() {
public int compare(Album a1, Album a2) {
return a1.name.compareTo(a2.name);
}});
List<Album> sortedFavs =
albums.stream()
.filter(a -> a.tracks.anyMatch(t -> (t.rating >= 4)))
.sorted(Comparator.comparing(a -> a.name))
.collect(Collectors.toList());
anyMatch), the sorting, and the collection of albums matching our criteria into a List. The Comparator.comparing() method takes a function that extracts a Comparable sort key, and returns a Comparator that compares on that key.