What is the easiest/shortest way to convert a Java 8 Stream
into an array?
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3I'd suggest you to revert the rollback as the question was more complete and showed you had tried something.– skiwiApr 15, 2014 at 9:13
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2@skiwi Thanks! but i thought the attempted code does not really add more information to the question, and nobody has screamed "show us your attempt" yet =)– user972946Apr 15, 2014 at 9:20
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20@skiwi: Although I usually shout at the do-my-homework-instead-of-me questions, this particular question seems to be clearer to me without any additional mess. Let's keep it tidy.– Honza ZidekApr 16, 2014 at 11:21
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1You can find a lot of answers and guidance in the official docs of the package: docs.oracle.com/javase/8/docs/api/java/util/stream/…– Christophe RoussyApr 1, 2020 at 9:07
10 Answers
The easiest method is to use the toArray(IntFunction<A[]> generator)
method with an array constructor reference. This is suggested in the API documentation for the method.
String[] stringArray = stringStream.toArray(String[]::new);
What it does is find a method that takes in an integer (the size) as argument, and returns a String[]
, which is exactly what (one of the overloads of) new String[]
does.
You could also write your own IntFunction
:
Stream<String> stringStream = ...;
String[] stringArray = stringStream.toArray(size -> new String[size]);
The purpose of the IntFunction<A[]> generator
is to convert an integer, the size of the array, to a new array.
Example code:
Stream<String> stringStream = Stream.of("a", "b", "c");
String[] stringArray = stringStream.toArray(size -> new String[size]);
Arrays.stream(stringArray).forEach(System.out::println);
Prints:
a
b
c
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10and here is an explanation why and how the Array constructor reference actually work: stackoverflow.com/questions/29447561/… Sep 12, 2016 at 18:16
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2"Zenexer is right, the solution should be: stream.toArray(String[]::new);" ... Well ok, but one should understand that the method reference is logically and functionally equivalent to
toArray(sz -> new String[sz])
so I'm not sure that one can really say what the solution should or must be.– scottbApr 20, 2017 at 14:16 -
3@scottb
sz -> new String[sz]
makes a new function where as the constructor reference does not. It depends how much you value Garbage Collection Churn I guess.– WORMSSAug 18, 2017 at 9:19 -
6@WORMSS It does not. It (statically!) makes a new,
private
method, which cannot cause churn, and both versions need to create a new object. A reference creates an object that points directly at the target method; a lambda creates an object that points at the generatedprivate
one. A reference to a constructor should still perform better for lack of indirection and easier VM optimization, but churning has nothing to do with it.– HTNWOct 29, 2017 at 23:54 -
2@HTNW you are correct, my apologise. It was infact my attempt to debug that was causing the churn that was causing the churn the first time I tried to do this, so I have had it stuck in my head that this is how it was. (Hate it when that happens).– WORMSSOct 30, 2017 at 8:38
If you want to get an array of ints, with values from 1 to 10, from a Stream<Integer>
, there is IntStream
at your disposal.
Here we create a Stream
with a Stream.of
method and convert a Stream<Integer>
to an IntStream
using a mapToInt
. Then we can call IntStream
's toArray
method.
Stream<Integer> stream = Stream.of(1,2,3,4,5,6,7,8,9,10);
//or use this to create our stream
//Stream<Integer> stream = IntStream.rangeClosed(1, 10).boxed();
int[] array = stream.mapToInt(x -> x).toArray();
Here is the same thing, without the Stream<Integer>
, using only the IntStream
:
int[]array2 = IntStream.rangeClosed(1, 10).toArray();
You can convert a java 8 stream to an array using this simple code block:
String[] myNewArray3 = myNewStream.toArray(String[]::new);
But let's explain things more, first, let's Create a list of string filled with three values:
String[] stringList = {"Bachiri","Taoufiq","Abderrahman"};
Create a stream from the given Array :
Stream<String> stringStream = Arrays.stream(stringList);
we can now perform some operations on this stream Ex:
Stream<String> myNewStream = stringStream.map(s -> s.toUpperCase());
and finally convert it to a java 8 Array using these methods:
1-Classic method (Functional interface)
IntFunction<String[]> intFunction = new IntFunction<String[]>() {
@Override
public String[] apply(int value) {
return new String[value];
}
};
String[] myNewArray = myNewStream.toArray(intFunction);
2 -Lambda expression
String[] myNewArray2 = myNewStream.toArray(value -> new String[value]);
3- Method reference
String[] myNewArray3 = myNewStream.toArray(String[]::new);
Method reference Explanation:
It's another way of writing a lambda expression that it's strictly equivalent to the other.
Convert text to String array where separating each value by comma, and trim every field, for example:
String[] stringArray = Arrays.stream(line.split(","))
.map(String::trim)
.toArray(String[]::new);
import java.util.List;
import java.util.stream.Stream;
class Main {
public static void main(String[] args) {
// Create a stream of strings from list of strings
Stream<String> myStreamOfStrings = List.of("lala", "foo", "bar").stream();
// Convert stream to array by using toArray method
String[] myArrayOfStrings = myStreamOfStrings.toArray(String[]::new);
// Print results
for (String string : myArrayOfStrings) {
System.out.println(string);
}
}
}
Try it out online: https://repl.it/@SmaMa/Stream-to-array
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1What is the difference between your answer and the accepted answer? Apr 6, 2020 at 13:54
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@LongNguyen It's a full example including an online replay scenario, not only a snippet.– Sma MaApr 6, 2020 at 14:27
You can create a custom collector that convert a stream to array.
public static <T> Collector<T, ?, T[]> toArray( IntFunction<T[]> converter )
{
return Collectors.collectingAndThen(
Collectors.toList(),
list ->list.toArray( converter.apply( list.size() ) ) );
}
and a quick use
List<String> input = Arrays.asList( ..... );
String[] result = input.stream().
.collect( CustomCollectors.**toArray**( String[]::new ) );
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5
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I needed a collector to pass to the 2-arg
Collectors.groupingBy
so that I could map some attribute to arrays of objects per attribute value. This answer gives me exactly that. Also @DidierL.– Ole V.V.Dec 9, 2018 at 13:34 -
Since Java 11 the finisher in collectingAndThen can be written as
list -> list.toArray(converter)
due to addition of Collection.toArray(IntFunction)– bjmiNov 22, 2020 at 9:45
Using the toArray(IntFunction<A[]> generator)
method is indeed a very elegant and safe way to convert (or more correctly, collect) a Stream into an array of the same type of the Stream.
However, if the returned array's type is not important, simply using the toArray()
method is both easier and shorter.
For example:
Stream<Object> args = Stream.of(BigDecimal.ONE, "Two", 3);
System.out.printf("%s, %s, %s!", args.toArray());
Stream<Integer> stream = Stream.of(1, 2, 3, 4, 5, 6);
int[] arr= stream.mapToInt(x->x.intValue()).toArray();
// create a stream of string elements
Stream<String> stringStream = Stream.of("A", "B", "C", "D", "E");
// convert the stream to arrays of strings
String[] stringArray = stringStream.toArray(String[]::new);
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1
Stream<Integer> stream = Stream.of(1, 2, 3, 4, 5, 6);
Integer[] integers = stream.toArray(it->new Integer[it]);