I have two maps that have a String as the key, and Set as its value. These two maps can share the same keys. I'm trying to merge the two Set values together if the two maps have the same key. The problem is, the second map might be null, and since not all keys are shared between the two maps, the Sets might also be null. I've come up with a couple options, but they all look pretty messy. Was wondering if anyone had a more efficient/prettier way of doing it. This is what I have so far:
Set<String> mergedSet = (firstMap.containsKey(commonKey)) ? firstMap.get(commonKey) : new HashSet<String>();
mergedSet.addAll(secondMap != null && secondMap.containsKey(commonKey) ? secondMap.get(commonKey) : new HashSet<String>());
null
. If you instead use an empty collection when you initialize, you will avoid all sorts of special cases (or runtime NPEs) in your code. This advice is in many Java resources, e.g. javapractices.com/topic/TopicAction.do?Id=59secondMap
is not itself stored in a map, and the last line implies it may be null.