可以将文章内容翻译成中文,广告屏蔽插件可能会导致该功能失效(如失效,请关闭广告屏蔽插件后再试):
问题:
I've just started looking at Java 8 and to try out lambdas I thought I'd try to rewrite a very simple thing I wrote recently. I need to turn a Map of String to Column into another Map of String to Column where the Column in the new Map is a defensive copy of the Column in the first Map. Column has a copy constructor. The closest I've got so far is:
Map<String, Column> newColumnMap= new HashMap<>();
originalColumnMap.entrySet().stream().forEach(x -> newColumnMap.put(x.getKey(), new Column(x.getValue())));
but I'm sure there must be a nicer way to do it and I'd be grateful for some advice.
回答1:
You could use a Collector:
import java.util.*;
import java.util.stream.Collectors;
public class Defensive {
public static void main(String[] args) {
Map<String, Column> original = new HashMap<>();
original.put("foo", new Column());
original.put("bar", new Column());
Map<String, Column> copy = original.entrySet()
.stream()
.collect(Collectors.toMap(Map.Entry::getKey,
e -> new Column(e.getValue())));
System.out.println(original);
System.out.println(copy);
}
static class Column {
public Column() {}
public Column(Column c) {}
}
}
回答2:
Map<String, Integer> map = new HashMap<>();
map.put("test1", 1);
map.put("test2", 2);
Map<String, Integer> map2 = new HashMap<>();
map.forEach(map2::put);
System.out.println("map: " + map);
System.out.println("map2: " + map2);
// Output:
// map: {test2=2, test1=1}
// map2: {test2=2, test1=1}
You can use the forEach
method to do what you want.
What you're doing there is:
map.forEach(new BiConsumer<String, Integer>() {
@Override
public void accept(String s, Integer integer) {
map2.put(s, integer);
}
});
Which we can simplify into a lambda:
map.forEach((s, integer) -> map2.put(s, integer));
And because we're just calling an existing method we can use a method reference, which gives us:
map.forEach(map2::put);
回答3:
The way without re-inserting all entries into the new map should be the fastest it won't because HashMap.clone
internally performs rehash as well.
Map<String, Column> newColumnMap = originalColumnMap.clone();
newColumnMap.replaceAll((s, c) -> new Column(c));
回答4:
Keep it Simple and use Java 8:-
Map<String, AccountGroupMappingModel> mapAccountGroup=CustomerDAO.getAccountGroupMapping();
Map<String, AccountGroupMappingModel> mapH2ToBydAccountGroups =
mapAccountGroup.entrySet().stream()
.collect(Collectors.toMap(e->e.getValue().getH2AccountGroup(),
e ->e.getValue())
);
回答5:
If you don't mind using 3rd party libraries, my cyclops-react lib has extensions for all JDK Collection types, including Map. You can directly use the map or bimap methods to transform your Map. A MapX can be constructed from an existing Map eg.
MapX<String, Column> y = MapX.fromMap(orgColumnMap)
.map(c->new Column(c.getValue());
If you also wish to change the key you can write
MapX<String, Column> y = MapX.fromMap(orgColumnMap)
.bimap(this::newKey,c->new Column(c.getValue());
bimap can be used to transform the keys and values at the same time.
As MapX extends Map the generated map can also be defined as
Map<String, Column> y
回答6:
Here is another way that gives you access to the key and the value at the same time, in case you have to do some kind of transformation.
Map<String, Integer> pointsByName = new HashMap<>();
Map<String, Integer> maxPointsByName = new HashMap<>();
Map<String, Double> gradesByName = pointsByName.entrySet().stream()
.map(entry -> new AbstractMap.SimpleImmutableEntry<>(
entry.getKey(), ((double) entry.getValue() /
maxPointsByName.get(entry.getKey())) * 100d))
.collect(Collectors.toMap(Map.Entry::getKey, Map.Entry::getValue));