I investigate LinkedHashSet
and HashSet
collections.
I wrote small program:
public class LHSTest {
public static void main(String[] args){
output(test(new LinkedHashSet()));
System.out.println("=========");
output(test(new HashSet()));
}
public static HashSet<MyClass> test(HashSet hashSet){
hashSet.add(new MyClass(1));
hashSet.add(new MyClass(2));
hashSet.add(new MyClass(3));
hashSet.add(new MyClass(4));
hashSet.add(new MyClass(5));
return hashSet;
}
public static void output(HashSet hashSet){
for(Iterator iterator = hashSet.iterator();iterator.hasNext();){
System.out.println(iterator.next());
}
}
}
class MyClass{
int a;
MyClass(int a){
this.a =a;
}
public int hashCode(){
return 15-a;
}
public String toString() {
return a+"";
}
}
output:
1
2
3
4
5
=========
5
4
3
2
1
When I saw this behaviour I began research source code of collections.
I noticed that both LinkedHashSet and HashSet use
common toString()
realization - from AbstractCollection
and common iterator()
from HashSet
What were explain the different output for LinkedHashSet
and HashSet
in my code?
Update after Ivan Babanin answer
For LinkedHashSet
and HashSet
invoke different constructors:
for LinkedHashSet
-
HashSet(int initialCapacity, float loadFactor, boolean dummy) {
map = new LinkedHashMap<E,Object>(initialCapacity, loadFactor);
}
for HashSet
-
public HashSet() {
map = new HashMap<E,Object>();
}
iterator for both HashMap
and -LinkedHasMap
(from HashSet
)
public Iterator<E> iterator() {
return map.keySet().iterator();
}
Research keySet()
method:
HashMap
:
public Set<K> keySet() {
Set<K> ks = keySet;
return (ks != null ? ks : (keySet = new KeySet()));
}
LinkedHashMap
cannot especial realization for keySet
method and uses HashMap
realization.
map.keySet().iterator() is
:
public class HashMap<K,V> extends AbstractMap<K,V> implements Map<K,V>, Cloneable, Serializable{
...
private final class EntrySet extends AbstractSet<Map.Entry<K,V>> {
public Iterator<Map.Entry<K,V>> iterator() {
return newEntryIterator();
}
...
}
...
}
map.keySet()
returns same type for HashMap
and LinkedHashMap
therefore invoke same newEntryIterator()
method.
Is it wrong statement?
for EJP update
I navigate to HashSet#iterator
: