I have objects
Person{
String name;
int age;
float gradeAverage;
}
Is there an easy way to sort
Person[] ArrayOfPersons
by age?
Do I have to use Comparable or Comparator? I don't fully understand them.
I have objects
Person{
String name;
int age;
float gradeAverage;
}
Is there an easy way to sort
Person[] ArrayOfPersons
by age?
Do I have to use Comparable or Comparator? I don't fully understand them.
You can check for age using a getter in your loop
for (int i = 0 ; i < persons.length - 1; i++) {
Person p = persons[i];
Person next = persons[i+1];
if(p.getAge() > next.getAge()) {
// Swap
}
}
However implementing Comparable is the convenient way
class Person implements Comparable<Person> {
String name;
int age;
float gradeAverage;
public int compareTo(Person other) {
if(this.getAge() > other.getAge())
return 1;
else if (this.getAge() == other.getAge())
return 0 ;
return -1 ;
}
public int getAge() {
return this.age ;
}
}
You can check Comparable
documentation also
Just for completeness, when using Java 8, you can use Comparator.comparing
to create a simple comparator for some attribute, e.g. Comparator.comparing(Person::getAge)
, or using lambda, like Comparator.comparing(p -> p.age)
, if there is not getter method for the age.
This makes it particularly easy to chain comparators for different attributes, using thenComparing
, e.g. for sorting primarily by age, and then by name in case of ties:
Comparator.comparing(Person::getAge).thenComparing(Person::getName)
Combine that with Arrays.sort
, and you are done.
Arrays.sort(arrayOfPersons, Comparator.comparing(Person::getAge));
You can implement the Comparable interface to make your class comparable. Make sure to override the compareTo method then.
public class Person implements Comparable<Person> {
String name;
int age;
float gradeAverage;
@Override
public int compareTo(Person p) {
if(this.age < p.getAge()) return -1;
if(this.age == p.getAge()) return 0;
//if(this.age > p.getAge()) return 1;
else return 1;
}
//also add a getter here
}
import java.util.Arrays;
public class PersonCompare {
public static void main(String[] args) {
Person p1 = new Person("Test1",10);
Person p2 = new Person("Test2",12);
Person p3 = new Person("Test3",4);
Person p4 = new Person("Test4",7);
Person[] ArrayOfPersons = {p1,p2,p3,p4};
Arrays.sort(ArrayOfPersons);
for(Person p: ArrayOfPersons) {
System.out.println(p.getName()+"--"+p.getAge());
}
}
}
class Person implements Comparable<Person> {
String name;
int age;
Person(String name, int age){
this.name=name; this.age=age;
}
public String getName() {
return name;
}
public void setName(String name) {
this.name = name;
}
public int getAge() {
return age;
}
public void setAge(int age) {
this.age = age;
}
@Override
public int compareTo(Person other) {
if(this.getAge() > other.getAge())
return 1;
else if (this.getAge() == other.getAge())
return 0 ;
return -1 ;
}
}
Yes just implement the Comparable
interface.
Here's an example :
class Person implements Comparable<Person> {
public int age;
public String name;
public int compareTo(Person other){
return this.age == other.age ? 0 : this.age > other.age ? 1 : -1;
}
}