Today I ran into some weird behaviour with a HashSet's iterator.
In the code example below, idString
uses an object reference returned by hs.iterator
to call the iterator's next()
method.
In idString2
the iterator is called via hs.iterator()
and it does not work anymore.
So I assume that HashSet.iterator() returns a new iterator object each time it is called. But then, why can I still use hs.iterator().hasNext()
in the while loop?
(Note that the code below is just an example :) )
import java.util.Arrays;
import java.util.HashSet;
import java.util.Iterator;
import org.junit.Test;
public class DummyTest {
static final HashSet<Integer> TEST_DATA = new HashSet<Integer>(
Arrays.asList(new Integer[] {
1,2,3,4,5,6,7,8,9,10
}));
@Test
public void testRunTest() {
// Correct output: 1, 2, 3, 4, 5, 6, 7, 8, 9, 10
System.out.println(idString(TEST_DATA));
// Only 1, 1, 1, 1, ...
System.out.println(idString2(TEST_DATA));
}
static String idString(HashSet<Integer> hs) {
Iterator<Integer> it = hs.iterator();
String res = it.next() + "";
while (it.hasNext()) {
res += ", " + it.next();
System.out.println(res); // debug
}
return res;
}
static String idString2(HashSet<Integer> hs) {
Iterator<Integer> it = hs.iterator();
// Prevent an infinite loop
int i = 0;
String res = null;
res = it.next() + "";
while (hs.iterator().hasNext() && i++ <= 10) {
// if replacing hs.iterator() with 'it', it works
res = res + ", " + hs.iterator().next();
System.out.println(res); // debug
}
return res;
}
}