Input >> list = [[1,2,3], [6], [3,4,5,6]]
Output >> [1,2,3,3,4,5,6,6]
I want to know if there is something more straightforward than this
l = []
list.each{ l = l + it }
println l
like a default groovy closure or method?
Try flatten
, ie:
list.flatten()
Or, to get the output you want:
list = [[1,2,3], [6], [3,4,5,6]]
assert list.flatten().sort() == [1,2,3,3,4,5,6,6]
[[1,2,3], [4,[5]],[6]].flatten()
. The cleanest way of doing the OP's concatenation is list.collectMany { it }
.
As some people may miss the comment by @Desty, posted as answer here:
Note that the semantics of this are different in that it recurses through the lists, producing different results in situations like this: [[1,2,3], [4,[5]],[6]].flatten(). The cleanest way of doing the OP's concatenation is list.collectMany { it }
Example:
list = [[1,2,3], [6], [3,4,5,6]]
assert list.collectMany{ it }.sort() == [1,2,3,3,4,5,6,6]
collectMany
keeps the object type correctly, while with flatten
reports List<?>
as result, which you may need to cast it to prevent IDE errors/warnings.