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You're reading from  Java Coding Problems - Second Edition

Product typeBook
Published inMar 2024
PublisherPackt
ISBN-139781837633944
Edition2nd Edition
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Author (1)
Anghel Leonard
Anghel Leonard
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Anghel Leonard

Anghel Leonard is a Chief Technology Strategist and independent consultant with 20+ years of experience in the Java ecosystem. In daily work, he is focused on architecting and developing Java distributed applications that empower robust architectures, clean code, and high-performance. Also passionate about coaching, mentoring and technical leadership. He is the author of several books, videos and dozens of articles related to Java technologies.
Read more about Anghel Leonard

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116. Getting a list from a stream

Collecting a Stream into a List is a popular task that occurs all over the place in applications that manipulate streams and collections.

In JDK 8, collecting a Stream into a List can be done via the toList() collector as follows:

List<File> roots = Stream.of(File.listRoots())
  .collect(Collectors.toList());

Starting with JDK 10, we can rely on the toUnmodifiableList() collector (for maps, use toUnmodifiableMap(), and for sets, toUnmodifiableSet()):

List<File> roots = Stream.of(File.listRoots())
  .collect(Collectors.toUnmodifiableList());

Obviously, the returned list is an unmodifiable/immutable list.

JDK 16 has introduced the following toList() default method in the Stream interface:

default List<T> toList() {
  return (List<T>) Collections.unmodifiableList(
    new ArrayList<>(Arrays.asList(this.toArray())));
}

Using this method to collect a Stream into an unmodifiable/immutable...

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Java Coding Problems - Second Edition
Published in: Mar 2024Publisher: PacktISBN-13: 9781837633944

Author (1)

author image
Anghel Leonard

Anghel Leonard is a Chief Technology Strategist and independent consultant with 20+ years of experience in the Java ecosystem. In daily work, he is focused on architecting and developing Java distributed applications that empower robust architectures, clean code, and high-performance. Also passionate about coaching, mentoring and technical leadership. He is the author of several books, videos and dozens of articles related to Java technologies.
Read more about Anghel Leonard