Map.Entry interface in java - java

java.util.Map.Entry as I know is a public static interface in java.util package that
returns collection view of a map but as far now I am confused with the static interface
and as it is Map.Entry is it an inner interface if so how do we have inner static interfaces in java

The definition of Entry happens to live inside the definition of Map (allowed by java). Being static means you don't need an instance of Map to refer to an Entry.
It's easiest to show how to use Map.Entry by an example. Here's how you can iterate over a map
Map<Integer, String> map = new HashMap<Integer, String>();
for (Map.Entry<Integer, String> entry : map.entrySet()) {
Integer key = entry.getKey();
String value = entry.getValue();
// do something with key and/or value etc
// you may also alter the entry's value inside this loop via entry.setValue()
}

There isn't really anything to be confused about.
Yes, Java allows interfaces to be members of classes or other interfaces.
No, that does not mean anything special. It changes absolutely nothing about how you can use such an interface or what you can do with it.
It only changes the name of that interface and creates a strong conceptual link between it and its enclosing type. In this case, a Map.Entry represents an entry of a Map. The designers of the API apparently felt that it made sense to stress this connection by making it a member type.

Example:
public class Outer {
public interface Bar {
Bar get();
}
}
Bar is a nested interface. Nested interfaces are static by default, so you could as well write:
public class Outer {
public static interface Bar {
Bar get();
}
}
Now, what static in this context means is that the interface is a static member, i.e. a member of the class.
You can do this with classes as well:
public class Tree {
private static class Node {
}
}
Here, Node is even private, meaning it's only visible within Tree. So, what's the benefit of this? Why not make Node a public class? Because of better encapsulation. First, the Node is an implementation detail of the Tree, so you don't want it to be visible. Second, if you expose Node via a public API, some client (programmer) could use it in his code. Now, he has a hard dependency on this class. If at some point you want to change the representation of you Tree, and you change/remove the Node class, the client code's may break. And last but not least, your public API becomes smaller, which is also desirable.
So, when to use static member classes/interfaces? Mostly, if you build some sort of Composite object (like a Tree, or a Linked List) or when the class only makes sense in the context of the outer class.

Java allows nested interfaces. You can nest them into classes or interfaces. For instance, Map.Entry is a nested interface defined in the Map interface.
Map implementations (TreeMap, HashMap) provide private implementations of Map.Entry, which are not visible outside the class.
Bohemian's answer addresses how to use Map.Entry.

Yes, it's an inner interface of the Map interface.
/**
* A map entry (key-value pair). The <tt>Map.entrySet</tt> method returns
* a collection-view of the map, whose elements are of this class. The
* <i>only</i> way to obtain a reference to a map entry is from the
* iterator of this collection-view. These <tt>Map.Entry</tt> objects are
* valid <i>only</i> for the duration of the iteration; more formally,
* the behavior of a map entry is undefined if the backing map has been
* modified after the entry was returned by the iterator, except through
* the <tt>setValue</tt> operation on the map entry.
*
* #see Map#entrySet()
* #since 1.2
*/
interface Entry<K,V> {
/**
* Returns the key corresponding to this entry.
*
* #return the key corresponding to this entry
* #throws IllegalStateException implementations may, but are not
* required to, throw this exception if the entry has been
* removed from the backing map.
*/
K getKey();
/**
* Returns the value corresponding to this entry. If the mapping
* has been removed from the backing map (by the iterator's
* <tt>remove</tt> operation), the results of this call are undefined.
*
* #return the value corresponding to this entry
* #throws IllegalStateException implementations may, but are not
* required to, throw this exception if the entry has been
* removed from the backing map.
*/
V getValue();
/**
* Replaces the value corresponding to this entry with the specified
* value (optional operation). (Writes through to the map.) The
* behavior of this call is undefined if the mapping has already been
* removed from the map (by the iterator's <tt>remove</tt> operation).
*
* #param value new value to be stored in this entry
* #return old value corresponding to the entry
* #throws UnsupportedOperationException if the <tt>put</tt> operation
* is not supported by the backing map
* #throws ClassCastException if the class of the specified value
* prevents it from being stored in the backing map
* #throws NullPointerException if the backing map does not permit
* null values, and the specified value is null
* #throws IllegalArgumentException if some property of this value
* prevents it from being stored in the backing map
* #throws IllegalStateException implementations may, but are not
* required to, throw this exception if the entry has been
* removed from the backing map.
*/
V setValue(V value);
/**
* Compares the specified object with this entry for equality.
* Returns <tt>true</tt> if the given object is also a map entry and
* the two entries represent the same mapping. More formally, two
* entries <tt>e1</tt> and <tt>e2</tt> represent the same mapping
* if<pre>
* (e1.getKey()==null ?
* e2.getKey()==null : e1.getKey().equals(e2.getKey())) &&
* (e1.getValue()==null ?
* e2.getValue()==null : e1.getValue().equals(e2.getValue()))
* </pre>
* This ensures that the <tt>equals</tt> method works properly across
* different implementations of the <tt>Map.Entry</tt> interface.
*
* #param o object to be compared for equality with this map entry
* #return <tt>true</tt> if the specified object is equal to this map
* entry
*/
boolean equals(Object o);
/**
* Returns the hash code value for this map entry. The hash code
* of a map entry <tt>e</tt> is defined to be: <pre>
* (e.getKey()==null ? 0 : e.getKey().hashCode()) ^
* (e.getValue()==null ? 0 : e.getValue().hashCode())
* </pre>
* This ensures that <tt>e1.equals(e2)</tt> implies that
* <tt>e1.hashCode()==e2.hashCode()</tt> for any two Entries
* <tt>e1</tt> and <tt>e2</tt>, as required by the general
* contract of <tt>Object.hashCode</tt>.
*
* #return the hash code value for this map entry
* #see Object#hashCode()
* #see Object#equals(Object)
* #see #equals(Object)
*/
int hashCode();
}
For more information about interfaces, see the Interfaces tutorial and this Static Nested Interfaces article.

Inner interfaces are implicitly public and static.
You can have inner interfaces as follows :
1. interface A {
.....
.....
interface B {
....
....
}
}
2. class A {
....
....
interface B {
....
....
}
}
You can access the above inner interface(B) by A.B where A is a class or an interface according to the above two cases.
For example,
class x implements A.B
{
....
....
}

Related

Adding a something to a wildcard <?> collection in Java

Hello I have this attribute: private Map<Function<T, Collection<?>>, Template<?>> functionTemplateMap = new LinkedHashMap<>(); To make a map from a function to a template (the template is what I'm coding, if needed I can provide the whole code), and then I have a function called forEach:
/**
*
* #param <E> Type of the new objects
* #param function Lambda that returns a collection of objects of any type
* #param string String with gaps
* #param functions Lambda(s) that accept as argument objects of the same type as the collection returns and will be used to fill the gaps
*/
public <E extends Comparable<E>> void addForEach(Function<T, Collection<E>> function, String string, Function<E, Object> ...functions) {
Template<E> temp = new Template<>();
temp.add(string, functions);
this.functionTemplateMap.put(function, temp);
}
The thing is that the collection that returns the function and the list of functions used as parameters must be of the same type, so I added the <E> at the beggining of the function, but since the functionTemplateMap has a Collection<?> so that it is more general, when adding it with put it gives me an error saying collection should be <?>, but then I can not check if the list of functions is of the same type <E>

Is it possible to override a method comment but not the method?

I have methods toSaveString(StringBuilder) and toSaveString() in several classes and thought of turning those into an interface. The first method would always have to be implemented and the second I could default because it basically only calls the first method every time with a new string builder and returns the resulting string. (Not what default is designed for, but bear with me.)
Now I wouldn't need to implement toSaveString() in the classes implementing the interface, but I would like to change its documentation nonetheless to match the class. Is there a way to achieve this without overriding the toSaveString() method in the implementing class? Because adding three lines to call the default method or five to copy the implementation seems redundant and easy to get errors mixed in.
Also feel free to leave comments about design alternatives here, but the question stays because it is interesting in its own right.
Look at the javadoc of the ArrayList#removeIf method:
/**
* #throws NullPointerException {#inheritDoc}
*/
#Override
public boolean removeIf(Predicate<? super E> filter) {
return removeIf(filter, 0, size);
}
It overrides its superclass Collection#removeIf method:
/**
* Removes all of the elements of this collection that satisfy the given
* predicate. Errors or runtime exceptions thrown during iteration or by
* the predicate are relayed to the caller.
*
* #implSpec
* The default implementation traverses all elements of the collection using
* its {#link #iterator}. Each matching element is removed using
* {#link Iterator#remove()}. If the collection's iterator does not
* support removal then an {#code UnsupportedOperationException} will be
* thrown on the first matching element.
*
* #param filter a predicate which returns {#code true} for elements to be
* removed
* #return {#code true} if any elements were removed
* #throws NullPointerException if the specified filter is null
* #throws UnsupportedOperationException if elements cannot be removed
* from this collection. Implementations may throw this exception if a
* matching element cannot be removed or if, in general, removal is not
* supported.
* #since 1.8
*/
default boolean removeIf(Predicate<? super E> filter) {
Objects.requireNonNull(filter);
boolean removed = false;
final Iterator<E> each = iterator();
while (each.hasNext()) {
if (filter.test(each.next())) {
each.remove();
removed = true;
}
}
return removed;
}
In your case, you can override only javadoc, and write something like this in the method body:
/**
* custom javadoc
*/
#Override
public boolean customMethod(Object parameter) {
return super.customMethod(parameter);
}
See also: Can I add code to an inherited method without overriding the whole method?

JDK source: code repetition Collection.java and Set.java

In JDK 8, java.util.Collection starts with
public interface Collection<E> extends Iterable<E> {
// Query Operations
/**
* Returns the number of elements in this collection. If this collection
* contains more than <tt>Integer.MAX_VALUE</tt> elements, returns
* <tt>Integer.MAX_VALUE</tt>.
*
* #return the number of elements in this collection
*/
int size();
Interestingly, java.util.Set starts with
public interface Set<E> extends Collection<E> {
// Query Operations
/**
* Returns the number of elements in this set (its cardinality). If this
* set contains more than <tt>Integer.MAX_VALUE</tt> elements, returns
* <tt>Integer.MAX_VALUE</tt>.
*
* #return the number of elements in this set (its cardinality)
*/
int size();
What is the purpose of overriding method declarations in interfaces? Why does not extends suffice?
EDIT java.util.List also shows redundancy, and the javadoc of List.size() is only minimally different that of Collection.size(), and does not introduce any new term:
public interface List<E> extends Collection<E> {
// Query Operations
/**
* Returns the number of elements in this list. If this list contains
* more than <tt>Integer.MAX_VALUE</tt> elements, returns
* <tt>Integer.MAX_VALUE</tt>.
*
* #return the number of elements in this list
*/
int size();
Overriding a method can be used for a lot of reasons besides to change the behavior. It can change the signature of the method (refining the return type with a covariant override), add annotations, broaden the accessibility (turning a protected method into public in a subclass), or refine the specification (expressed as Javadoc). In this case, the override exists so that the Set Javadoc could define the term "cardinality".

Suspicious call to java.util.Collection.contains

I am getting the following warning from my NetBeans IDE.
Suspicious call to java.util.Collection.contains
Expected type T, actual type Object
May I know what does that means?
This doesn't make sense to me. Both List and Collection class's contains method, are using Object as their method parameter.
import java.util.ArrayList;
import java.util.Collection;
import java.util.Iterator;
import java.util.List;
/**
*
* #author yan-cheng.cheok
*/
public abstract class AbstractCollection<T> implements Collection<T> {
protected List<T> list = new ArrayList<T>();
public boolean contains(Object o) {
// Suspicious call to java.util.Collection.contains
// Expected type T, actual type Object
return list.contains(o);
}
Code snippet from Collection class
/**
* Returns <tt>true</tt> if this collection contains the specified element.
* More formally, returns <tt>true</tt> if and only if this collection
* contains at least one element <tt>e</tt> such that
* <tt>(o==null ? e==null : o.equals(e))</tt>.
*
* #param o element whose presence in this collection is to be tested
* #return <tt>true</tt> if this collection contains the specified
* element
* #throws ClassCastException if the type of the specified element
* is incompatible with this collection (optional)
* #throws NullPointerException if the specified element is null and this
* collection does not permit null elements (optional)
*/
boolean contains(Object o);
Code snippet from List class
/**
* Returns <tt>true</tt> if this list contains the specified element.
* More formally, returns <tt>true</tt> if and only if this list contains
* at least one element <tt>e</tt> such that
* <tt>(o==null ? e==null : o.equals(e))</tt>.
*
* #param o element whose presence in this list is to be tested
* #return <tt>true</tt> if this list contains the specified element
* #throws ClassCastException if the type of the specified element
* is incompatible with this list (optional)
* #throws NullPointerException if the specified element is null and this
* list does not permit null elements (optional)
*/
boolean contains(Object o);
In the call to list.contains you are comparing an object to a type T. Casting o to type T should resolve your warning.
Calling the contains method with an Object instead of the generic type may be a programming error. Since the code is still valid the compiler will only show a warning.
An example why this warning is necessary:
List<Long> l = new ArrayList<Long>();
l.add(1l);
l.contains(1);
The code is valid but would always return false. An error that is normally hidden by contains accepting object instead of a generic type, so the compiler is limited to warnings.
Since there are valid use cases for passing an object, you should be able to use a #SuppressWarnings() annotation to hide this warning (only do this if you know what you are doing).

eclipse add unimplemented methods including javadoc

When implementing an interface in eclipse, it has a really nice feature that lets you "add unimplemented methods", and it will generate the method stubs for the interface methods.
However, it does not bring along the method documentation from the interface methods, and I was wondering if there was a way to get eclipse to do that.
Here's what I want to happen. Let's say I had an interface like this:
public interface BaseInterface {
/**
* This method takes the given string parameter and returns its integer value.
*
* #param x the string to convert
* #return the integer value of the string
*
* #throws Exception if some error occurs
*/
int method1(String x);
}
Now I create a class called MyClass which implements this interface. What I want to happen is that when I say "Add Unimplemented Methods", I want my code to look like this:
public class MyClass implements BaseInterface {
/**
* This method takes the given string parameter and returns its integer value.
*
* #param x the string to convert
* #return the integer value of the string
*
* #throws Exception if some error occurs
*/
public int method1(String x) {
return 0;
}
}
Yup : these methods are generated using the code templates you wrote.
You'll have to go in "Window/Preferences -> Java/Code style/Code templates"
Then, in the list, select "Comments/overriding methods" and change the content with the one you found in "Comments/methods" :
/**
* ${tags}
*/
You can even think about adding an ${see_to_overridden} to have a direct link to original method. However, notice that a method with no javadoc will automatically inherit its javadoc from its overriden one, so such a template may generate less relevant doc than default behaviour.
You can achieve it by JavaDoc annotation. It is not Eclipse specific and will work in all build/doc generation tools:
/**
* My custom decumentation, and then the original one:
*
* {#inheritDoc}
*/

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