Chapter 8. Working with Java Collections
This chapter introduces Java’s interpretation of fundamental data structures, known as the Java Collections. These abstractions are core to many (if not most) programming types and form an essential part of any programmer’s basic toolkit. Accordingly, this is one of the most important chapters of the entire book and provides a toolkit that is essential to virtually all Java programmers.
In this chapter, we will introduce the fundamental interfaces and the type hierarchy, show how to use them, and discuss aspects of their overall design. Both the “classic” approach to handling the collections and the newer approach (using the Streams API and the lambda expressions functionality introduced in Java 8) will be covered.
Introduction to Collections API
The Java Collections are a set of generic interfaces that describe the most common forms of data structure. Java ships with several implementations of each of the classic data structures, and because the types are represented as interfaces, it is very possible for development teams to develop their own, specialized implementations of the interfaces for use in their own projects.
The Java Collections define two fundamental types of data structures. A
Collection
is a grouping of objects, while a Map
is a set of
mappings, or associations, between objects. The basic layout of the Java
Collections is shown in Figure 8-1.
Within this basic description, a Set
is a type of Collection
with no duplicates, ...
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