Usually you use a List
or Set
of Javabeans for this. Each Javabean in turn represents one real world entity, like a row in a database. For example an User
:
public class User {
private Long id;
private String name;
private Integer age;
// Add/generate getters+setters.
}
with
List<User> users = new ArrayList<User>();
users.add(new User(1L, "foo", 30));
users.add(new User(2L, "bar", 20));
//...
The List
provides methods for fast access by index.
For an undetermined amount of properties (columns) you may consider to use a Map<String, Object>
instead where the key represents the property (column) name.
List<Map<String, Object>> table = new ArrayList<Map<String, Object>>();
Map<String, Object> row = new HashMap<String, Object>();
row.put("id", 1L);
row.put("name", "foo");
row.put("age", 30);
table.add(row);
// ...
It only adds a bit more overhead than a simple Javabean since those string keys needs to be stored in the heap as well.
If you don't care about column names, then you can also just go ahead with a List<List<Object>>
or maybe even a less flexible Object[][]
. With both you can easily access elements by x
and y
.