The helper methods from the accepted answer are not needed. Streams can be used with lambdas or usually shortened using Method References. Streams enable functional operations. map()
converts the elements and collect(...)
or toArray()
wrap the stream back up into an array or collection.
Venkat Subramaniam's talk (video) explains it better than me.
1 Convert List<String>
to List<Integer>
List<String> l1 = Arrays.asList("1", "2", "3");
List<Integer> r1 = l1.stream().map(Integer::parseInt).collect(Collectors.toList());
// the longer full lambda version:
List<Integer> r1 = l1.stream().map(s -> Integer.parseInt(s)).collect(Collectors.toList());
2 Convert List<String>
to int[]
int[] r2 = l1.stream().mapToInt(Integer::parseInt).toArray();
3 Convert String[]
to List<Integer>
String[] a1 = {"4", "5", "6"};
List<Integer> r3 = Stream.of(a1).map(Integer::parseInt).collect(Collectors.toList());
4 Convert String[]
to int[]
int[] r4 = Stream.of(a1).mapToInt(Integer::parseInt).toArray();
5 Convert String[]
to List<Double>
List<Double> r5 = Stream.of(a1).map(Double::parseDouble).collect(Collectors.toList());
6 (bonus) Convert int[]
to String[]
int[] a2 = {7, 8, 9};
String[] r6 = Arrays.stream(a2).mapToObj(Integer::toString).toArray(String[]::new);
Lots more variations are possible of course.
Also see Ideone version of these examples. Can click fork and then run to run in the browser.