public interface MutableSet<T> extends UnsortedSetIterable<T>, MutableCollection<T>, Set<T>, Cloneable
| Modifier and Type | Method and Description |
|---|---|
MutableSet<T> |
asSynchronized()
Returns a synchronized (thread-safe) collection backed by this collection.
|
MutableSet<T> |
asUnmodifiable()
Returns an unmodifable view of the set.
|
MutableSet<T> |
clone() |
<V> MutableSet<V> |
collect(Function<? super T,? extends V> function)
Returns a new collection with the results of applying the specified function on each element of the source
collection.
|
MutableBooleanSet |
collectBoolean(BooleanFunction<? super T> booleanFunction)
Returns a new primitive
boolean iterable with the results of applying the specified function on each element
of the source collection. |
MutableByteSet |
collectByte(ByteFunction<? super T> byteFunction)
Returns a new primitive
byte iterable with the results of applying the specified function on each element
of the source collection. |
MutableCharSet |
collectChar(CharFunction<? super T> charFunction)
Returns a new primitive
char iterable with the results of applying the specified function on each element
of the source collection. |
MutableDoubleSet |
collectDouble(DoubleFunction<? super T> doubleFunction)
Returns a new primitive
double iterable with the results of applying the specified function on each element
of the source collection. |
MutableFloatSet |
collectFloat(FloatFunction<? super T> floatFunction)
Returns a new primitive
float iterable with the results of applying the specified function on each element
of the source collection. |
<V> MutableSet<V> |
collectIf(Predicate<? super T> predicate,
Function<? super T,? extends V> function)
Returns a new collection with the results of applying the specified function on each element of the source
collection, but only for those elements which return true upon evaluation of the predicate.
|
MutableIntSet |
collectInt(IntFunction<? super T> intFunction)
Returns a new primitive
int iterable with the results of applying the specified function on each element
of the source collection. |
MutableLongSet |
collectLong(LongFunction<? super T> longFunction)
Returns a new primitive
long iterable with the results of applying the specified function on each element
of the source collection. |
MutableShortSet |
collectShort(ShortFunction<? super T> shortFunction)
Returns a new primitive
short iterable with the results of applying the specified function on each element
of the source collection. |
<P,V> MutableSet<V> |
collectWith(Function2<? super T,? super P,? extends V> function,
P parameter)
Same as collect with a
Function2 and specified parameter which is passed to the block
|
MutableSet<T> |
difference(SetIterable<? extends T> subtrahendSet)
Returns the set of all members of
this that are not members of subtrahendSet. |
<V> MutableSet<V> |
flatCollect(Function<? super T,? extends Iterable<V>> function)
flatCollect is a special case of RichIterable.collect(Function). |
<V> MutableSetMultimap<V,T> |
groupBy(Function<? super T,? extends V> function)
For each element of the iterable, the function is evaluated and the results of these evaluations are collected
into a new multimap, where the transformed value is the key and the original values are added to the same (or similar)
species of collection as the source iterable.
|
<V> MutableSetMultimap<V,T> |
groupByEach(Function<? super T,? extends Iterable<V>> function)
Similar to
RichIterable.groupBy(Function), except the result of evaluating function will return a collection of keys
for each value. |
MutableSet<T> |
intersect(SetIterable<? extends T> set)
Returns the set of all objects that are members of both
this and set. |
MutableSet<T> |
newEmpty()
Creates a new empty mutable version of the same collection type.
|
PartitionMutableSet<T> |
partition(Predicate<? super T> predicate)
Filters a collection into a PartitionedIterable based on the evaluation of the predicate.
|
<P> PartitionMutableSet<T> |
partitionWith(Predicate2<? super T,? super P> predicate,
P parameter)
Filters a collection into a PartitionIterable based on the evaluation of the predicate.
|
MutableSet<UnsortedSetIterable<T>> |
powerSet()
Returns the set whose members are all possible subsets of
this. |
MutableSet<T> |
reject(Predicate<? super T> predicate)
Returns all elements of the source collection that return false when evaluating of the predicate.
|
<P> MutableSet<T> |
rejectWith(Predicate2<? super T,? super P> predicate,
P parameter)
Similar to
RichIterable.reject(Predicate), except with an evaluation parameter for the second generic argument in Predicate2. |
MutableSet<T> |
select(Predicate<? super T> predicate)
Returns all elements of the source collection that return true when evaluating the predicate.
|
<S> MutableSet<S> |
selectInstancesOf(Class<S> clazz)
Returns all elements of the source collection that are instances of the Class
clazz. |
<P> MutableSet<T> |
selectWith(Predicate2<? super T,? super P> predicate,
P parameter)
Similar to
RichIterable.select(Predicate), except with an evaluation parameter for the second generic argument in Predicate2. |
MutableSet<T> |
symmetricDifference(SetIterable<? extends T> setB)
Returns the set of all objects that are a member of exactly one of
this and setB (elements which
are in one of the sets, but not in both). |
ImmutableSet<T> |
toImmutable()
Returns an immutable copy of this set.
|
MutableSet<T> |
union(SetIterable<? extends T> set)
Returns the set of all objects that are a member of
this or set or both. |
MutableSet<T> |
with(T element)
This method allows mutable and fixed size collections the ability to add elements to their existing elements.
|
MutableSet<T> |
withAll(Iterable<? extends T> elements)
This method allows mutable and fixed size collections the ability to add multiple elements to their existing
elements.
|
MutableSet<T> |
without(T element)
This method allows mutable and fixed size collections the ability to remove elements from their existing elements.
|
MutableSet<T> |
withoutAll(Iterable<? extends T> elements)
This method allows mutable and fixed size collections the ability to remove multiple elements from their existing
elements.
|
<S> MutableSet<Pair<T,S>> |
zip(Iterable<S> that)
Returns a
RichIterable formed from this RichIterable and another RichIterable by
combining corresponding elements in pairs. |
MutableSet<Pair<T,Integer>> |
zipWithIndex()
Zips this
RichIterable with its indices. |
cartesianProduct, differenceInto, equals, hashCode, intersectInto, isProperSubsetOf, isSubsetOf, symmetricDifferenceInto, unionIntoaggregateBy, aggregateInPlaceBy, allSatisfy, allSatisfyWith, anySatisfy, anySatisfyWith, appendString, appendString, appendString, asLazy, chunk, collect, collectBoolean, collectByte, collectChar, collectDouble, collectFloat, collectIf, collectInt, collectLong, collectShort, collectWith, contains, containsAll, containsAllArguments, containsAllIterable, count, countWith, detect, detectIfNone, detectWith, detectWithIfNone, flatCollect, getFirst, getLast, groupBy, groupByEach, groupByUniqueKey, injectInto, injectInto, injectInto, injectInto, injectInto, isEmpty, makeString, makeString, makeString, max, max, maxBy, min, min, minBy, noneSatisfy, noneSatisfyWith, notEmpty, reject, rejectWith, select, selectWith, size, sumOfDouble, sumOfFloat, sumOfInt, sumOfLong, toArray, toArray, toBag, toList, toMap, toSet, toSortedList, toSortedList, toSortedListBy, toSortedMap, toSortedMap, toSortedSet, toSortedSet, toSortedSetBy, toString, zip, zipWithIndexforEach, forEachWith, forEachWithIndexforEach, iterator, spliteratoraddAllIterable, aggregateBy, aggregateInPlaceBy, groupByUniqueKey, injectIntoWith, removeAllIterable, removeIf, removeIfWith, retainAllIterable, selectAndRejectWithadd, addAll, clear, contains, containsAll, equals, hashCode, isEmpty, iterator, remove, removeAll, retainAll, size, spliterator, toArray, toArrayparallelStream, removeIf, streamMutableSet<T> with(T element)
MutableCollectionMutableCollectionIn the case oflist; list = list.with("1"); list = list.with("2"); return list;
FixedSizeCollection a new instance of MutableCollection will be returned by with, and any
variables that previously referenced the original collection will need to be redirected to reference the
new instance. For other MutableCollection types you will replace the reference to collection with the same
collection, since the instance will return "this" after calling add on itself.with in interface MutableCollection<T>Collection.add(Object)MutableSet<T> without(T element)
MutableCollectionMutableCollectionIn the case oflist; list = list.without("1"); list = list.without("2"); return list;
FixedSizeCollection a new instance of MutableCollection will be returned by without, and
any variables that previously referenced the original collection will need to be redirected to reference the
new instance. For other MutableCollection types you will replace the reference to collection with the same
collection, since the instance will return "this" after calling remove on itself.without in interface MutableCollection<T>Collection.remove(Object)MutableSet<T> withAll(Iterable<? extends T> elements)
MutableCollectionMutableCollectionIn the case oflist; list = list.withAll(FastList.newListWith("1", "2")); return list;
FixedSizeCollection a new instance of MutableCollection will be returned by withAll, and
any variables that previously referenced the original collection will need to be redirected to reference the
new instance. For other MutableCollection types you will replace the reference to collection with the same
collection, since the instance will return "this" after calling addAll on itself.withAll in interface MutableCollection<T>Collection.addAll(Collection)MutableSet<T> withoutAll(Iterable<? extends T> elements)
MutableCollectionMutableCollectionIn the case oflist; list = list.withoutAll(FastList.newListWith("1", "2")); return list;
FixedSizeCollection a new instance of MutableCollection will be returned by withoutAll,
and any variables that previously referenced the original collection will need to be redirected to reference the
new instance. For other MutableCollection types you will replace the reference to collection with the same
collection, since the instance will return "this" after calling removeAll on itself.withoutAll in interface MutableCollection<T>Collection.removeAll(Collection)MutableSet<T> newEmpty()
MutableCollectionnewEmpty in interface MutableCollection<T>MutableSet<T> clone()
MutableSet<T> select(Predicate<? super T> predicate)
RichIterablee.g.
return people.select(new Predicate<Person>()
{
public boolean accept(Person person)
{
return person.getAddress().getCity().equals("Metuchen");
}
});
select in interface MutableCollection<T>select in interface RichIterable<T>select in interface SetIterable<T>select in interface UnsortedSetIterable<T><P> MutableSet<T> selectWith(Predicate2<? super T,? super P> predicate, P parameter)
RichIterableRichIterable.select(Predicate), except with an evaluation parameter for the second generic argument in Predicate2.selectWith in interface MutableCollection<T>selectWith in interface RichIterable<T>selectWith in interface SetIterable<T>selectWith in interface UnsortedSetIterable<T>predicate - a Predicate2 to use as the select criteriaparameter - a parameter to pass in for evaluation of the second argument P in predicateRichIterable.select(Predicate)MutableSet<T> reject(Predicate<? super T> predicate)
RichIterablee.g.
return people.reject(new Predicate<Person>()
{
public boolean accept(Person person)
{
return person.person.getLastName().equals("Smith");
}
});
e.g.
return people.reject(Predicates.attributeEqual("lastName", "Smith"));
reject in interface MutableCollection<T>reject in interface RichIterable<T>reject in interface SetIterable<T>reject in interface UnsortedSetIterable<T>predicate - a Predicate to use as the reject criteriaPredicate.accept(Object) method to evaluate to false<P> MutableSet<T> rejectWith(Predicate2<? super T,? super P> predicate, P parameter)
RichIterableRichIterable.reject(Predicate), except with an evaluation parameter for the second generic argument in Predicate2.rejectWith in interface MutableCollection<T>rejectWith in interface RichIterable<T>rejectWith in interface SetIterable<T>rejectWith in interface UnsortedSetIterable<T>predicate - a Predicate2 to use as the select criteriaparameter - a parameter to pass in for evaluation of the second argument P in predicateRichIterable.select(Predicate)PartitionMutableSet<T> partition(Predicate<? super T> predicate)
RichIterablee.g.
return people.partition(new Predicate<Person>()
{
public boolean accept(Person person)
{
return person.getAddress().getState().getName().equals("New York");
}
});
partition in interface MutableCollection<T>partition in interface RichIterable<T>partition in interface SetIterable<T><P> PartitionMutableSet<T> partitionWith(Predicate2<? super T,? super P> predicate, P parameter)
RichIterablee.g.
return people.partitionWith(new Predicate2<Person, String>()
{
public boolean accept(Person person, String state)
{
return person.getAddress().getState().getName().equals(state);
}
}, "New York");
partitionWith in interface MutableCollection<T>partitionWith in interface RichIterable<T>partitionWith in interface SetIterable<T><S> MutableSet<S> selectInstancesOf(Class<S> clazz)
RichIterableclazz.selectInstancesOf in interface MutableCollection<T>selectInstancesOf in interface RichIterable<T>selectInstancesOf in interface SetIterable<T>selectInstancesOf in interface UnsortedSetIterable<T><V> MutableSet<V> collect(Function<? super T,? extends V> function)
RichIterablee.g.
return people.collect(new Function<Person, String>()
{
public String valueOf(Person person)
{
return person.getFirstName() + " " + person.getLastName();
}
});
collect in interface MutableCollection<T>collect in interface RichIterable<T>collect in interface UnsortedSetIterable<T>MutableBooleanSet collectBoolean(BooleanFunction<? super T> booleanFunction)
RichIterableboolean iterable with the results of applying the specified function on each element
of the source collection. This method is also commonly called transform or map.
e.g.
return people.collectBoolean(new BooleanFunction<Person>()
{
public boolean booleanValueOf(Person person)
{
return person.hasDrivingLicense();
}
});
collectBoolean in interface MutableCollection<T>collectBoolean in interface RichIterable<T>collectBoolean in interface UnsortedSetIterable<T>MutableByteSet collectByte(ByteFunction<? super T> byteFunction)
RichIterablebyte iterable with the results of applying the specified function on each element
of the source collection. This method is also commonly called transform or map.
e.g.
return people.collectByte(new ByteFunction<Person>()
{
public byte byteValueOf(Person person)
{
return person.getCode();
}
});
collectByte in interface MutableCollection<T>collectByte in interface RichIterable<T>collectByte in interface UnsortedSetIterable<T>MutableCharSet collectChar(CharFunction<? super T> charFunction)
RichIterablechar iterable with the results of applying the specified function on each element
of the source collection. This method is also commonly called transform or map.
e.g.
return people.collectChar(new CharFunction<Person>()
{
public char charValueOf(Person person)
{
return person.getMiddleInitial();
}
});
collectChar in interface MutableCollection<T>collectChar in interface RichIterable<T>collectChar in interface UnsortedSetIterable<T>MutableDoubleSet collectDouble(DoubleFunction<? super T> doubleFunction)
RichIterabledouble iterable with the results of applying the specified function on each element
of the source collection. This method is also commonly called transform or map.
e.g.
return people.collectDouble(new DoubleFunction<Person>()
{
public double doubleValueOf(Person person)
{
return person.getMilesFromNorthPole();
}
});
collectDouble in interface MutableCollection<T>collectDouble in interface RichIterable<T>collectDouble in interface UnsortedSetIterable<T>MutableFloatSet collectFloat(FloatFunction<? super T> floatFunction)
RichIterablefloat iterable with the results of applying the specified function on each element
of the source collection. This method is also commonly called transform or map.
e.g.
return people.collectFloat(new FloatFunction<Person>()
{
public float floatValueOf(Person person)
{
return person.getHeightInInches();
}
});
collectFloat in interface MutableCollection<T>collectFloat in interface RichIterable<T>collectFloat in interface UnsortedSetIterable<T>MutableIntSet collectInt(IntFunction<? super T> intFunction)
RichIterableint iterable with the results of applying the specified function on each element
of the source collection. This method is also commonly called transform or map.
e.g.
return people.collectInt(new IntFunction<Person>()
{
public int intValueOf(Person person)
{
return person.getAge();
}
});
collectInt in interface MutableCollection<T>collectInt in interface RichIterable<T>collectInt in interface UnsortedSetIterable<T>MutableLongSet collectLong(LongFunction<? super T> longFunction)
RichIterablelong iterable with the results of applying the specified function on each element
of the source collection. This method is also commonly called transform or map.
e.g.
return people.collectLong(new LongFunction<Person>()
{
public long longValueOf(Person person)
{
return person.getGuid();
}
});
collectLong in interface MutableCollection<T>collectLong in interface RichIterable<T>collectLong in interface UnsortedSetIterable<T>MutableShortSet collectShort(ShortFunction<? super T> shortFunction)
RichIterableshort iterable with the results of applying the specified function on each element
of the source collection. This method is also commonly called transform or map.
e.g.
return people.collectShort(new ShortFunction<Person>()
{
public short shortValueOf(Person person)
{
return person.getNumberOfJunkMailItemsReceivedPerMonth();
}
});
collectShort in interface MutableCollection<T>collectShort in interface RichIterable<T>collectShort in interface UnsortedSetIterable<T><P,V> MutableSet<V> collectWith(Function2<? super T,? super P,? extends V> function, P parameter)
RichIterableFunction2 and specified parameter which is passed to the block
e.g. Function2addParameterFunction = new Function2 () { public Integer value(final Integer each, final Integer parameter) { return each + parameter; } }; FastList.newListWith(1, 2, 3).collectWith(addParameterFunction, Integer.valueOf(1));
collectWith in interface MutableCollection<T>collectWith in interface RichIterable<T>collectWith in interface UnsortedSetIterable<T>function - A Function2 to use as the collect transformation functionparameter - A parameter to pass in for evaluation of the second argument P in functionRichIterable that contains the transformed elements returned by Function2.value(Object, Object)RichIterable.collect(Function)<V> MutableSet<V> collectIf(Predicate<? super T> predicate, Function<? super T,? extends V> function)
RichIterablee.g. Lists.mutable.of().with(1, 2, 3).collectIf(Predicates.notNull(), Functions.getToString())
collectIf in interface MutableCollection<T>collectIf in interface RichIterable<T>collectIf in interface UnsortedSetIterable<T><V> MutableSet<V> flatCollect(Function<? super T,? extends Iterable<V>> function)
RichIterableflatCollect is a special case of RichIterable.collect(Function). With collect, when the Function returns
a collection, the result is a collection of collections. flatCollect outputs a single "flattened" collection
instead. This method is commonly called flatMap.
Consider the following example where we have a Person class, and each Person has a list of Address objects. Take the following Function:
Function<Person, List<Address>> addressFunction = new Function<Person, List<Address>>()
{
public List<Address> valueOf(Person person)
{
return person.getAddresses();
}
};
MutableList<Person> people = ...;
Using collect returns a collection of collections of addresses.
MutableList<List<Address>> addresses = people.collect(addressFunction);Using
flatCollect returns a single flattened list of addresses.
MutableList<Address> addresses = people.flatCollect(addressFunction);
flatCollect in interface MutableCollection<T>flatCollect in interface RichIterable<T>flatCollect in interface UnsortedSetIterable<T>function - The Function to applyfunctionMutableSet<T> asUnmodifiable()
asUnmodifiable in interface MutableCollection<T>MutableSet<T> asSynchronized()
MutableCollection
MutableCollection collection = myCollection.asSynchronized();
...
synchronized(collection)
{
Iterator i = c.iterator(); // Must be in the synchronized block
while (i.hasNext())
foo(i.next());
}
Failure to follow this advice may result in non-deterministic behavior.
The preferred way of iterating over a synchronized collection is to use the collection.forEach() method which is
properly synchronized internally.
MutableCollection collection = myCollection.asSynchronized();
...
collection.forEach(new Procedure()
{
public void value(Object each)
{
...
}
});
The returned collection does not pass the hashCode and equals operations through to the
backing collection, but relies on Object's equals and hashCode methods. This is necessary to preserve
the contracts of these operations in the case that the backing collection is a set or a list.
The returned collection will be serializable if this collection is serializable.asSynchronized in interface MutableCollection<T>ImmutableSet<T> toImmutable()
toImmutable in interface MutableCollection<T>toImmutable in interface UnsortedSetIterable<T><V> MutableSetMultimap<V,T> groupBy(Function<? super T,? extends V> function)
RichIterablee.g.
return people.groupBy(new Function<Person, String>()
{
public String value(Person person)
{
return person.getFirstName() + " " + person.getLastName();
}
});
groupBy in interface MutableCollection<T>groupBy in interface RichIterable<T>groupBy in interface UnsortedSetIterable<T><V> MutableSetMultimap<V,T> groupByEach(Function<? super T,? extends Iterable<V>> function)
RichIterableRichIterable.groupBy(Function), except the result of evaluating function will return a collection of keys
for each value.groupByEach in interface MutableCollection<T>groupByEach in interface RichIterable<T>groupByEach in interface UnsortedSetIterable<T><S> MutableSet<Pair<T,S>> zip(Iterable<S> that)
RichIterableRichIterable formed from this RichIterable and another RichIterable by
combining corresponding elements in pairs. If one of the two RichIterables is longer than the other, its
remaining elements are ignored.zip in interface MutableCollection<T>zip in interface RichIterable<T>zip in interface UnsortedSetIterable<T>S - the type of the second half of the returned pairsthat - The RichIterable providing the second half of each result pairRichIterable containing pairs consisting of corresponding elements of this RichIterable and that. The length of the returned RichIterable is the minimum of the lengths of
this RichIterable and that.MutableSet<Pair<T,Integer>> zipWithIndex()
RichIterableRichIterable with its indices.zipWithIndex in interface MutableCollection<T>zipWithIndex in interface RichIterable<T>zipWithIndex in interface SetIterable<T>zipWithIndex in interface UnsortedSetIterable<T>RichIterable containing pairs consisting of all elements of this RichIterable
paired with their index. Indices start at 0.RichIterable.zip(Iterable)MutableSet<T> union(SetIterable<? extends T> set)
SetIterablethis or set or both. The union of [1, 2, 3]
and [2, 3, 4] is the set [1, 2, 3, 4]. If equal elements appear in both sets, then the output will contain the
copy from this.union in interface SetIterable<T>union in interface UnsortedSetIterable<T>MutableSet<T> intersect(SetIterable<? extends T> set)
SetIterablethis and set. The intersection of
[1, 2, 3] and [2, 3, 4] is the set [2, 3]. The output will contain instances from this, not set.intersect in interface SetIterable<T>intersect in interface UnsortedSetIterable<T>MutableSet<T> difference(SetIterable<? extends T> subtrahendSet)
SetIterablethis that are not members of subtrahendSet. The difference of
[1, 2, 3] and [2, 3, 4] is [1].difference in interface SetIterable<T>difference in interface UnsortedSetIterable<T>MutableSet<T> symmetricDifference(SetIterable<? extends T> setB)
SetIterablethis and setB (elements which
are in one of the sets, but not in both). For instance, for the sets [1, 2, 3] and [2, 3, 4], the symmetric
difference set is [1, 4] . It is the set difference of the union and the intersection.symmetricDifference in interface SetIterable<T>symmetricDifference in interface UnsortedSetIterable<T>MutableSet<UnsortedSetIterable<T>> powerSet()
UnsortedSetIterablethis. For example, the powerset of [1, 2] is
[[], [1], [2], [1, 2]].powerSet in interface UnsortedSetIterable<T>Copyright © 2004–2017. All rights reserved.