vote up 0 vote down star

As part of an exercise, am implementing an ArrayList which will support Enumerations.

Following is the adapter that converts an Iterator to an Enumeration:

public class MyEnumeratorAdapter<Object> implements Enumeration<Object> {

    private Iterator<Object> adaptee;

    public MyEnumeratorAdapter(Iterator<Object> it) {
    	this.adaptee = it;
    }

    @Override
    public boolean hasMoreElements() {
    	return adaptee.hasNext();
    }

    @Override
    public Object nextElement() {
    	return adaptee.next();
    }

}

and my arraylist class is:

public class MyArrayList<Object> extends ArrayList<Object> {

    public MyArrayList() {
    	this.enumerator = new MyEnumeratorAdapter<Object>(this.iterator());
    }

    public Enumeration<Object> enumerator() {
    	return this.enumerator;

    }

    public boolean hasMoreElements() {
    	return this.enumerator.hasMoreElements();
    }

    public Object nextElement() {
    	return this.enumerator.nextElement();
    }

    private static final long serialVersionUID = 1L;

    private Enumeration<Object> enumerator;

}

however, when I try this testing with the following code, I'm getting java.util.ConcurrentModificationException

public static void main(String[] args) {
    	MyArrayList<String> names = new MyArrayList<String>();
    	names.add("jim");
    	names.add("jack");
    	names.add("jai");

    	for (Enumeration<String> iterator = names.enumerator(); iterator
    			.hasMoreElements();) {
    		String name = (String) iterator.nextElement();
    		System.out.println(name);
    	}

    }

what mistake am I doing?

Can I have an ArrayList class that support Enumerations?

flag

2 Answers

vote up 1 vote down check

MyArrayList has several issues:

  1. it creates an Iterator on a zero sized array list; you must create a fresh iterator each time you call enumerator
  2. it implements method of Enumerable directly in MyArrayList
  3. it doesn't use generics properly

This class should fix these issues:

public class MyArrayList<T> extends ArrayList<T> {

    public Enumeration<T> enumerator() {
        return new MyEnumeratorAdapter(this.iterator());
    }
}
link|flag
Fixed 1 and 3 issues. Thank You. Where should I place the methods of Enumeration if myArrayList has to support it? – cedar715 Aug 29 at 16:26
in MyEnumeratorAdapter? – dfa Aug 29 at 17:34
vote up 1 vote down

You end up using the same Iterator repeatedly. You need a new one each time (by creating a new Enumeration each time).

link|flag

Your Answer

Get an OpenID
or

Not the answer you're looking for? Browse other questions tagged or ask your own question.