0

I have an ArrayList with 3 Objects in it. Each Object is a new book in my case. Each book has different values for the title, retail price, quantity in stock, etc.

How do I compare and sort the retail price for all of the objects. I have heard of

Collections.sort(books, new Comparator<BookInfo>(){
    @Override
    public int compare(BookInfo book1, BookInfo book2) {
        return book1.getTitle().compareTo(book2.getTitle());
    }
});

with a custom Comparator, but I cannot use the compareTo method for doubles/ints. How would I implements this, or change it so I can compare doubles/ints?

3
  • 1
    Just use <, ==, and > for comparing primitive values.
    – rgettman
    Feb 19, 2014 at 0:44
  • Yes this will work for only comparing two values, but what I need is to compare all the values and sort them.
    – user3325783
    Feb 19, 2014 at 0:46
  • @user3325783: to sort a list you just need a function that compares two values... maybe read some more about sort algorithms?
    – vanza
    Feb 19, 2014 at 0:48

3 Answers 3

2

You can do this always

Assumption : price value is Double

   Collections.sort(books, new Comparator<BookInfo>(){

    @Override
    public int compare(BookInfo book1, BookInfo book2) {
        return book1.getPrice().compareTo(book2.getPrice());
    }
});

Reference : How to sort an array of ints using a custom comparator?

1
  • I don't think this will work because you can't derefence doubles. And the price is a double
    – user3325783
    Feb 19, 2014 at 1:16
1

try casting to class Double and then compare:

Collections.sort(books, new Comparator<BookInfo>(){

        @Override
        public int compare(BookInfo book1, BookInfo book2) {
            Double p1 = book1.getRetailPrice();
            Double p2 = book2.getRetailPrice();
            return p1.compareTo(p2);
        }
    });

If you want to sort first after Price and second after Name:

Collections.sort(books, new Comparator<BookInfo>(){

        @Override
        public int compare(BookInfo book1, BookInfo book2) {
            Double p1 = book1.getRetailPrice();
            Double p2 = book2.getRetailPrice();
            int res = p1.compareTo(p2);
            if(res == 0){
                return book1.getTitle().compareTo(book2.getTitle());
            }
            return res;
        }
    }); 
0
1

You can implement the Comparator however you want, you only need to return a correct value, depending on comparison of the two objects:

  • negative integer if book1 < book2
  • positive integer if book1 > book2
  • 0 if book1 == book2

    Collections.sort(books, new Comparator<BookInfo>() {
        @Override
    
        public int compare(BookInfo book1, BookInfo book2) {
            if (book1.getPrice() < book2.getPrice()) {
                return -1;
            } else if (book1.getPrice() > book2.getPrice()) {
                return 1;
            } else return 0;
        }
    });
    

This way you can customize the behaviour of Comparator anyway you like.

Your Answer

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