vote up 13 vote down star
2

I have a Java list of integers, List<Integer> and I'd like to convert all the integer objects into strings, thus finishing up with a new List<String>.

Naturally, I could create a new List and loop through and String.valueOf() all the integers, but I was wondering if there was a better (read: more automatic) way of doing it?

[Minor editing to fix < & > display problem.]

flag

80% accept rate

13 Answers

vote up 15 vote down check

As far as I know, iterate and instantiate is the only way to do this. Something like (for others potential help, since I'm sure you know how to do this):

List<Integer> oldList = ...
/* Specify the size of the list up front to prevent resizing. */
List<String> newList = new ArrayList<String>(oldList.size()) 
for (Integer myInt : oldList) { 
  newList.add(String.valueOf(myInt)); 
}
link|flag
vote up 2 vote down

@Jonathan: I could be mistaken, but I believe that String.valueOf() in this case will call the String.valueOf(Object) function rather than getting boxed to String.valueOf(int). String.valueOf(Object) just returns "null" if it is null or calls Object.toString() if non-null, which shouldn't involve boxing (although obviously instantiating new string objects is involved).

link|flag
vote up 5 vote down

Instead of using String.valueOf I'd use .toString(); it avoids some of the auto boxing described by @johnathan.holland

The javadoc says that valueOf returns the same thing as Integer.toString().

List<Integer> oldList = ...
List<String> newList = new ArrayList<String>(oldList.size());

for (Integer myInt : oldList) { 
  newList.add(myInt.toString()); 
}
link|flag
as pointed out by Tom Hawtin in the 'winning' answer, one cannot instance List<String> as it is only an interface. – Stu Thompson Sep 14 '08 at 23:11
Heh I knew that. Just I wrote the code without trying it. I'll fix it in my answer. – ScArcher2 Sep 15 '08 at 18:24
vote up 0 vote down

I think using Object.toString() for any purpose other than debugging is probably a really bad idea, even though in this case the two are functionally equivalent (assuming the list has no nulls). Developers are free to change the behavior of any toString() method without any warning, including the toString() methods of any classes in the standard library.

Don't even worry about the performance problems caused by the boxing/unboxing process. If performance is critical, just use an array. If it's really critical, don't use Java. Trying to outsmart the JVM will only lead to heartache.

link|flag
vote up 6 vote down

The source for String.valueOf shows this:

public static String valueOf(Object obj) {
    return (obj == null) ? "null" : obj.toString();
}

Not that it matters much, but I would use toString.

link|flag
vote up 1 vote down

You can't avoid the "boxing overhead"; Java's faux generic containers can only store Objects, so your ints must be boxed into Integers. In principle it could avoid the downcast from Object to Integer (since it's pointless, because Object is good enough for both String.valueOf and Object.toString) but I don't know if the compiler is smart enough to do that. The conversion from String to Object should be more or less a no-op, so I would be disinclined to worry about that one.

link|flag
vote up 4 vote down

Not core Java, and not generic-ified, but the popular Jakarta commons collections library has some useful abstractions for this sort of task. Specifically, have a look at the collect methods on

CollectionUtils

Something to consider if you are already using commons collections in your project.

link|flag
vote up 19 vote down

What you're doing is fine, but if you feel the need to 'Java-it-up' you could use a Transformer and the collect method from Apache Commons, e.g.:

public class IntegerToStringTransformer implements Transformer<Integer, String> {
   public String transform(final Integer i) {
      return (i == null ? null : i.toString);
   }
}

..and then..

CollectionUtils.collect(
   collectionOfIntegers, 
   new IntegerToStringTransformer(), 
   newCollectionOfStrings);
link|flag
vote up 2 vote down

To the people concerned about "boxing" in jsight's answer: there is none. String.valueOf(Object) is used here, and no unboxing to int is ever performed.

Whether you use Integer.toString() or String.valueOf(Object) depends on how you want to handle possible nulls. Do you want to throw an exception (probably), or have "null" Strings in your list (maybe). If the former, do you want to throw a NullPointerException or some other type?

Also, one small flaw in jsight's response: List is an interface, you can't use the new operator on it. I would probably use a java.util.ArrayList in this case, especially since we know up front how long the list is likely to be.

link|flag
vote up 1 vote down

An answer for experts only:

    List<Integer> ints = ...;
    String all = new ArrayList<Integer>(ints).toString();
    String[] split = all.substring(1, all.length()-1).split(", ");
    List<String> strs = Arrays.asList(split);
link|flag
vote up 1 vote down

Just for fun, a solution using the jsr166y fork-join framework that should in JDK7.

import java.util.concurrent.forkjoin.*;

private final ForkJoinExecutor executor = new ForkJoinPool();
...
List<Integer> ints = ...;
List<String> strs =
    ParallelArray.create(ints.size(), Integer.class, executor)
    .withMapping(new Ops.Op<Integer,String>() { public String op(Integer i) {
        return String.valueOf(i);
    }})
    .all()
    .asList();

(Disclaimer: Not compiled. Spec is not finalised. Etc.)

Unlikely to be in JDK7 is a bit of type inference and syntactical sugar to make that withMapping call less verbose:

    .withMapping(#(Integer i) String.valueOf(i))
link|flag
vote up 0 vote down

This is such a basic thing to do I wouldn't use an external library (it will cause a dependency in your project that you probably don't need).

We have a class of static methods specifically crafted to do these sort of jobs. Because the code for this is so simple we let Hotspot do the optimization for us. This seems to be a theme in my code recently: write very simple (straightforward) code and let Hotspot do its magic. We rarely have performance issues around code like this - when a new VM version comes along you get all the extra speed benefits etc.

As much as I love Jakarta collections, they don't support Generics and use 1.4 as the LCD. I am wary of Google Collections because they are listed as Alpha support level!

link|flag
vote up 1 vote down

Using Google Collections, you could use the transform method in the Lists class

import com.google.common.collect.Lists;
import com.google.common.base.Functions

List<Integer> integers = Arrays.asList(1, 2, 3, 4);

List<String> strings = Lists.transform(integers, Functions.toStringFunction());

The List returned by transform is a view on the backing list - the transformation will be applied on each access to the transformed list.

Be aware that Functions.toStringFunction() will throw a NullPointerException when applied to null, so only use it if you are sure your list will not contain null.

link|flag

Your Answer

Get an OpenID
or

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