2

Suppose I have declared an enum and corresponding emummap as:

enum MyEnum {
    CONSTANT1, CONSTANT2, CONSTANT3;
}

EnumMap<MyEnum, String> MyEnumMap = new EnumMap<MyEnum, String>(MyEnum.class);

I want to iterate over MyEnumMap, for example, just to print each Entry one by one.

What is the best approach(fastest) to iterate over keys in the following cases:

  1. When it is ensured that each constant in MyEnum is a key in MyEnumMap
  2. When each constant in MyEnum may or may not be a key in MyEnumMap

I want to choose between foreach loop using MyEnumMap.keySet() or MyEnum.values(). Any other approach is most welcomed.

10
  • Unless you find that this particular part of your code is a bottleneck in a real life situation, you shouldn't try to optimize it. Use the most readable and clear way. May 24, 2015 at 9:27
  • @RealSkeptic I agree with you. But I read about this data structure today and want to begin with the simplest but optimised approach to use it. MyEnumMap.keySet() or MyEnum.values() are both readable but I want to use the better one May 24, 2015 at 9:31
  • This is called "premature optimization". And it is considered a bad approach to programming. May 24, 2015 at 9:31
  • If you want to print the entries, iterate over the entrySet directly.
    – Alexis C.
    May 24, 2015 at 9:33
  • 1
    Read the part about when to optimize in Wikipedia's article about optimization. The issue is that if you are giving priority to optimization when you write a program, you'll probably write it less cleanly and it will be more complicated and less easy to write correctly and debug. Therefore, start by making a clean and readable program, and only add optimization at the end if it is needed (a bottleneck is found). May 24, 2015 at 11:21

4 Answers 4

2

It does not matter. Internally, EnumMap is implemented with a pair of arrays of the same length as the number of enum entries. One array has enum elements, while the second array has objects mapped to them, or NULL placeholders. Any iteration over EnumMap is therefore equivalent to a for loop on an integer index that traverses the entire range of enum ordinals, so you should pick the approach that makes your code most readable to you.

2
  • if that is the case, why is it better than a HashMap (as what I read somewhere)? Also if I iterate using MyEnumMap.keySet(), I don't get null valued keys for the keys not put explicitly in the map. May 24, 2015 at 9:58
  • @Mukund It's better than HashMap because most enums have a small number of entries. If you make an enum with 10,000 entries, and use a map that has ten..fifteen entries, HashMap would be faster by an order of magnitude. Note that in my answer I mention NULL placeholders. The implementation uses them to skip during the iteration the entries that have not been explicitly set to null. See the way the source uses unmaskNull(...) method. May 24, 2015 at 10:03
1

If you take a look at code of EnumMap#keySet()

381  public Set<K> keySet() {
382 Set<K> ks = keySet;
383 if (ks != null)
384 return ks;
385 else
386 return keySet = new KeySet();
387 }

you will notice that it returns keySet used internally by EnumMap to store keys.

Now each time we call MyEnum.values() we are getting different array filled with all enum elements. This means that first empty array is created which later needs to be filled with all enums which requires some iteration.

So in first approach you are skipping iterating over enums already stored by map, while insecond approach we simply creating some temporary array which involves additional iteration over all MyEnum elements.

1

Perhaps, you just want another way of writing the code.... Since keys are always unique

for(MyEnum myEnum: MyEnum.values()){
        String value = map.get(myEnum);
         If(value != null){ 
             //use the value here
          }
 }

Just another way to write it.

Or you could also try

for (Map.Entry<MyEnum, String> entry : map.entrySet()) {       
           System.out.println(entry.getKey() + "/" + entry.getValue()); 
 }
1
  • How is this another way? OP is explicitly asking about MyEnum.values().
    – Pshemo
    May 24, 2015 at 10:00
0

It depend on your application logic, but here are some hints:

for 1)

 // it is a bit faster to iterate over plain array, than over Set
 // And you can also get here information about entries that are in enum, but not in hashMap, so you can have logic for those cases.
 for (MyEnum e: MyEnum.values()) {
     // you can get here information what is contained and not contained in your map
}

for 2) But it is still better to use 1) because you can have there information of enum values not contained in Map.

for (MyEnum e: MyEnumMap.keySet()) {
   // you can check here all that is in your map, but you cant tell what is in enum but not in your map
}
1
  • can you please justify your answer. And what do you mean by "But it is still better to use 2)" May 24, 2015 at 9:34

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