Sietse de Kaper solution assumes a reverse sorted list, definitely not the most natural thing to have around
The natural sort order in java is following the ascending natural ordering. (see Collection.sort http://java.sun.com/j2se/1.5.0/docs/api/java/util/Collections.html#sort(java.util.List) documentation)
From your example,
target date = 2008-10-03
list = 2008-10-01 2008-10-02 2008-10-04
If another developper uses your method with a naive approach he would get 2008-10-01 which is not what was expected
Don't make assumptions as to the ordering of the list.
If you have to for performance reasons try to follow the most natural convention (sorted ascending)
If you really have to follow another convention you really should document the hell out of it.
private Date getDateNearest(List<Date> dates, Date targetDate){
Date returnDate = targetDate
for (Date date : dates) {
// if the current iteration'sdate is "before" the target date
if (date.compareTo(targetDate) <= 0) {
// if the current iteration's date is "after" the current return date
if (date.compareTo(returnDate) > 0){
returnDate=date;
}
}
}
return returnDate;
}
edit - I also like the Treeset answer but I think it might be slightly slower as it is equivalent to sorting the data then looking it up => nlog(n) for sorting and then the documentation implies it is log(n) for access so that would be nlog(n)+log(n) vs n