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I am breaking my mind to find a solution to the following problem. I have 4 different ArrayList that get their values from a Database. They can have size from 0 (including) till what ever. Each list may have different size and values also. What I am trying to do effectively is : Compare all the non 0 size lists and check if they have some common integers and what are those values.

Any ideas? Thank you!

4 Answers 4

6

If you need a collection of common integers for all, excluding empty ones:

List<List<Integer>> lists = ...
Collection<Integer> common = new HashSet<Integer>(lists.get(0));
for (int i = 1; i < lists.size(); i++) {
   if (!lists.get(i).isEmpty()) 
     common.retainAll(lists.get(i));
}

at the end the common will contain integers that common for all of them.

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    Will this work if one of the lists is empty? Because if it is empty I still need to know if there are common values to the rest of the lists that are not.
    – Vagelism
    Apr 8, 2012 at 14:25
  • 1
    What do you need - common integers that are in all lists, or a set of integers, where each one is common for at least for two of them? Apr 8, 2012 at 14:29
  • Just only the integers that are common for all the lists that have values.If they dont have values there is no need to be compared between them.For example if 3 of the lists have values I want to know if there is a common value in 3 of them and what is this value.
    – Vagelism
    Apr 8, 2012 at 14:33
  • @natix Try to compile this code before downvoting. It works. Though, I altered the code as I agree, that having a collection of them is better. Apr 8, 2012 at 15:11
  • @Eugene Retunsky: I don't see how a fact that a code can be compiled is an argument. Arrays of generic types are just bad and in this case also unnecessary. Nevertheless, the altered code is now OK, so I cancelled my downvote.
    – Natix
    Apr 8, 2012 at 15:19
2

You can use set intersection operations with your ArrayList objects.

Something like this:

List<Integer> l1 = new ArrayList<Integer>();

l1.add(1);
l1.add(2);
l1.add(3);

List<Integer> l2= new ArrayList<Integer>();
l2.add(4);
l2.add(2);
l2.add(3);

List<Integer> l3 = new ArrayList<Integer>(l2);
l3.retainAll(l1);

Now, l3 should have only common elements between l1 and l2.

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  • With 2 lists seems easy! Now what if there are 4 and we dont know witch has values or not?
    – Vagelism
    Apr 8, 2012 at 14:36
2

You might be wanting to use apache commons CollectionUtils.intersection() to get the intersection of two collections...

Iteratively generate the intersection, and if it is not empty when you are done - you have a common element, and it is in this resulting collection.

Regarding empty lists: just check if its size() is 0, and if it is - skip this list.

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You can do this. If you have multiple elements to search, put the search in a loop.

List aList = new ArrayList(); aList.add(new Integer(1));

if(aList !=null && !aList.isEmpty()) { if(aList.contains(1)) { System.out.println("got it"); } }

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