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Ok. Here is a problem. This is my collection : {2,3,4,2,3,5}. Let's assume that it is a List for now. I would like to search this collection for all matches of '2'. I would like indexes of the same. I know that there are indexOf() and lastIndexOf() methods in List and Arrays.binarySearch(). However, all of them return one element indicating the position of the searched element. Is there a simple and efficient way to find all matches? Please note that this question is not limited to primitive types.

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7 Answers 7

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You can't binarySearch unless the list is sorted. If it's sorted, then all the matching items are between indexOf and lastIndexOf.

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Iterate through the collection and check every element manually.

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  • This, really. You could go and make a method for it to simplify things, but your best bet for what I (believe) you want will be to create an array, loop through your passed in collection, and add matching results to your created array, then return it.
    – Eric
    Sep 16, 2009 at 7:48
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If you want all the matches, the most strait-forward way is to loop through it.

Simplicity is the best strategy.

Or you have some particular reason not looping through it?

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  • I would think it wouldn't be an optimum approach to the problem. Too many iterations, too much processor time.
    – Jay
    Sep 16, 2009 at 7:47
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    But if you don't sort the collection ahead, binary search wouldn't do much help either. If you use certain data structure, like a binary tree, the same question would have some different solutions. Collection is too general. So you may want to choose the right data structure according to your needs. Sep 16, 2009 at 7:51
  • Is there any third party API out there which has this kind of feature? Apache Commons? Google Collections?
    – Jay
    Sep 16, 2009 at 7:59
  • I am sorry. I don't know any API for it. However, I think even if you find one, it would probably use loop in their implementation too. So I still recommend you to use loop. If your collection is too big, it takes a long time for a search, then a database engine would be a nice choice, you don't want to store that much data in your memory. Sep 16, 2009 at 8:22
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    "Too many iterations, too much processor time." Since there is no order to your elements, you must read and check every element, so any approach must iterate through the entire list somehow.
    – newacct
    Sep 17, 2009 at 7:03
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Try Apache CollectionUtil class method countMatches

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Why is it that you want to find the indexes? If possible, consider using something other than a list, like a hash table that allows duplicates or a sorted list so that you reduce your search time. Otherwise the only way you can get all instances of that integer is by manually searching using a for loop.

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Use LambdaJ and you'll have a 'closure like' system for writing your case.

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Check out the Bolts functional programming library. You can do filtering with that.

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