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I can't seem to find a Java List that's max length is long's max value.

Does such a List exist?

If so, where?

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  • 4
    Do you really need to hold that amount of data in memory?
    – Reimeus
    Jan 27, 2014 at 2:05
  • Are you expecting to hold more than 2 billion elements in a list? Given that Object headers are 8 bytes, plus 4 bytes per reference, you're looking at (8 bytes+4 bytes)*2 billion = 24GB of memory, at the very lowest end of a "full" int-length list. And it's likely worse for a 64-bit machine.
    – sigpwned
    Jan 27, 2014 at 2:05
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    Hmm. Just one reference is required - File, for example.
    – Basilevs
    Jan 27, 2014 at 2:14
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    @Gracchus There is no standard implementation which doesn't store its data in memory. However custom implementation of List interface is perfectly capable to store its data in external storage.
    – Basilevs
    Jan 27, 2014 at 2:49
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    Lists are abused frequently where a more streaming approached should be used like an iterator or writer. Try to make your library / app use these interfaces instead.
    – Adam Gent
    Jan 27, 2014 at 3:41

3 Answers 3

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As @afsantos says, the ArrayList class is inherently limited to Integer.MAX_VALUE entries because of the limitations of Java arrays.

LinkedList doesn't have this limitation, but it is (nonetheless) expensive:

  • Each entry incurs an memory overhead of 2 references plus the size of an object header ... compared to just one reference for an array-based representation.

  • Indexing is an O(N) operation compared with O(1) for an array-based list.

Here is a link to Java library that supports huge in-memory collections using direct mapped memory and/or encoding of the elements:

And here is a link to a huge collections library with an ArrayList analog that uses 2-level arrays (arrays of arrays) to avoid the 32 bit address limit.

There could be other alternatives out there.

One could also envisage a "big" variant of regular array lists that used an array of arrays rather than a single array. But if you allow insertion into the middle of the list, it becomes difficult / expensive to achieve O(1) lookup. (That might be why I couldn't find an example with Google ...)

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From the List documentation:

int size()

Returns the number of elements in this list. If this list contains more than Integer.MAX_VALUE elements, returns Integer.MAX_VALUE.

So, even if a specific implementation of List holds Long.MAX_VALUE elements, you wouldn't know, using the standard List interface.

I'm not sure if one exists, but my bet would be on LinkedList, since ArrayList is based on arrays, and those can't hold more than Integer.MAX_VALUE elements.

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    Thank you afsantos! Yes, LinkedList seems to limited only by memory.
    – user1382306
    Jan 27, 2014 at 2:12
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As List.get(int) accepts int as its argument, it is impossible to address entries with indexes greater than Integer.MAX_VALUE.

Do note, however, that Iterable<?> or Map<Long, ?> can address much more data. As List implements Iterable it could contain any amount of data (that part being not exposed with int-based List's API).

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