2

I have a List<Float> which has elements in sorted order. The elements are added to the list like this:

list.add(17.0);
list.add(19.0);
list.add(19.5);
list.add(20.0);
list.add(20.5);
list.add(23.0);
list.add(23.5);
list.add(34.0);
list.add(39.0);
list.add(39.5);

I want to extract the elements which have a difference of 0.50 in sequential order as a range. I need to convert this to a List, containing "17.0", "19.0-20.5", "23-23.5", "34", and "39-39.5". How can I do this?

2
  • First thoughts: Use a Map. Mar 26, 2015 at 6:41
  • I think you can use a for loop to do that.
    – Antony Dao
    Mar 26, 2015 at 7:26

2 Answers 2

1

Hope this help:

List<Float> list = new ArrayList<Float>();
    list.add((float) 17.0);
    list.add((float) 19.0);
    list.add((float) 19.5);
    list.add((float) 20.0);
    list.add((float) 20.5);
    list.add((float) 23.0);
    list.add((float) 23.5);
    list.add((float) 34.0);
    list.add((float) 39.0);
    list.add((float) 39.5);

    List<String> retval = new ArrayList<String>();

    float sequenceBegin = list.get(0);
    float prev = list.get(0);
    for (int i = 1; i < list.size(); i++) {
        float d = list.get(i);
        if (d - prev != 0.5) {
            String seqStr = "";
            if (prev == sequenceBegin) {
                seqStr += prev; // sequence has only one item
            } else {
                seqStr += sequenceBegin + "-" + prev;
            }
            retval.add(seqStr);
            sequenceBegin = d;
        }
        prev = d;
    }

    //process the last item
    String seqStr = "";
    if (prev == sequenceBegin) {
        seqStr += prev; 
    } else {
        seqStr += sequenceBegin + "-" + prev;
    }
    retval.add(seqStr);     

    System.out.println(retval);




Output: [17.0, 19.0-20.5, 23.0-23.5, 34.0, 39.0-39.5]
3
  • BTW, I have not already checked the case of duplicated items (i.e there are more than 1 items 17.0) . You can optimize it to make your code more reliable.
    – Antony Dao
    Mar 26, 2015 at 8:11
  • Floating point precision will play games with you. Comparing a float to another float is almost always problematic. When your values grow this could happen: System.out.println(9999999.5f - 9999999.0f); // 1.0 System.out.println(1.5f - 1.0f); // 0.5 Mar 26, 2015 at 8:48
  • @Anthony.....for me it will never have duplicate elements as I am populating list from Set So your code is good enough for me, I have upvoted the answers . thanks a lot.
    – Amit
    Mar 26, 2015 at 12:05
0

Try below example:

    // TODO Auto-generated method stub
    List<Float> list = new ArrayList<Float>();
    list.add((float) 17.0);
    list.add((float) 19.0);
    list.add((float) 19.5);
    list.add((float) 20.0);
    list.add((float) 20.5);
    list.add((float) 23.0);
    list.add((float) 23.5);
    list.add((float) 34.0);
    list.add((float) 39.0);
    list.add((float) 39.5);

    List<List<Float>> listTmp = new ArrayList<List<Float>>();       
    List<Float> iList = null;

    for(int i = 0; i < list.size(); i++){
        if(iList == null) {
            iList = new ArrayList<Float>();
            iList.add(list.get(i));
        }
        else {
            if(list.get(i) - iList.get(iList.size() - 1) == 0.5){
                iList.add(list.get(i));
                if(i == list.size() - 1){
                    listTmp.add(iList);
                }
            }
            else {
                listTmp.add(iList);
                iList = null;
                i--;
            }
        }
    }

    List<String> finalList = new ArrayList<String>();

    for(int i = 0; i < listTmp.size(); i++){
        List<Float> iiList = listTmp.get(i);
        if(iiList.size() == 1){
            finalList.add(String.valueOf(iiList.get(0)));
        }
        else {
            finalList.add(String.valueOf(iiList.get(0)) + "-" + String.valueOf(iiList.get(iiList.size() - 1)));
        }           
    }


    System.out.println(finalList);

Hope this help!

3
  • Hi Nam, this looks good but still it dosn't print the last range of 39 to 39.5.
    – Amit
    Mar 26, 2015 at 7:55
  • I would be VERY careful with assuming that comparing floats like that would be 100% accurate Mar 26, 2015 at 8:04
  • I just revise a little bit to get the full result! Please enjoy!
    – Nam Dam
    Mar 26, 2015 at 8:12

Your Answer

By clicking “Post Your Answer”, you agree to our terms of service and acknowledge you have read our privacy policy.

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